A cross-cultural examination of bi-directional mentalising in autistic and non-autistic adults.

IF 6.3 1区 医学 Q1 GENETICS & HEREDITY
Bianca A Schuster, Y Okamoto, T Takahashi, Y Kurihara, C T Keating, J L Cook, H Kosaka, M Ide, H Naruse, C Kraaijkamp, R Osu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: So-called 'mismatch accounts' propose that, rather than arising from a socio-cognitive deficit present in autistic people, mentalising difficulties are the product of a mismatch in neurotype between interaction partners. Although this idea has grown in popularity over recent years, there is currently only limited empirical evidence to support mismatch theories. Moreover, the social model of disability such theories are grounded in demands a culturally situated view of social interaction, yet research on mentalising and/or autism is largely biased towards Western countries, with little knowledge on how successful mentalising is defined differently, and how tools to assess socio-cognitive ability compare, across cultures.

Methods: Using a widely employed mentalising task-the animations task-, the current study investigated and compared the bi-directional mentalising performance of British and Japanese autistic and non-autistic adults and assessed observer-agent kinematic similarity as a potential dimension along which mismatches may occur between neurotypes. Participants were asked to depict various mental state- and action-based interactions by moving two triangles across a touch-screen device before viewing and interpreting stimuli generated by other participants.

Results: In the UK sample, our results replicate a seminal prior study in showing poorer mentalising abilities in non-autistic adults for animations generated by the autistic group. Crucially, the same pattern did not emerge in the Japanese sample, where there were no mentalising differences between the two groups.

Limitations: Limitations of the current study include that efforts to match all samples within and across cultures in terms of IQ, gender, and age were not successful in all comparisons, but control analyses suggest this did not affect our results. Furthermore, any performance differences were found for both the mental state- and action-based conditions, mirroring prior work and raising questions about the domain-specificity of the employed task.

Conclusions: Our results add support for a paradigm shift in the autism literature, moving beyond deficit-based models and towards acknowledging the inherently relational nature of social interaction. We further discuss how our findings suggest limited cultural transferability of common socio-cognitive measures rather than superior mentalising abilities in Japanese autistic adults, underscoring the need for more cross-cultural research and the development of culturally sensitive scientific and diagnostic tools.

自闭症与非自闭症成人双向心智化的跨文化研究。
背景:所谓的“不匹配说”提出,心智障碍不是由自闭症患者存在的社会认知缺陷引起的,而是互动伙伴之间神经类型不匹配的产物。尽管这一观点近年来越来越受欢迎,但目前只有有限的经验证据支持不匹配理论。此外,残疾的社会模型,这些理论是建立在社会互动的文化背景的基础上的,然而,关于心智化和/或自闭症的研究在很大程度上偏向于西方国家,对于如何不同地定义成功的心智化以及如何在不同文化中比较评估社会认知能力的工具知之甚少。方法:本研究采用一种广泛使用的心智化任务——动画任务,调查和比较了英国和日本自闭症和非自闭症成年人的双向心智化表现,并评估了观察者-主体运动相似性作为神经类型之间可能发生不匹配的潜在维度。参与者被要求在观看和解释其他参与者产生的刺激之前,通过在触摸屏设备上移动两个三角形来描述各种基于精神状态和行为的互动。结果:在英国的样本中,我们的结果重复了一项开创性的先前研究,表明非自闭症成年人对自闭症群体制作的动画的心智化能力较差。至关重要的是,同样的模式在日本的样本中没有出现,两组之间没有心理差异。局限性:当前研究的局限性包括,在智商、性别和年龄方面匹配所有文化内部和跨文化样本的努力在所有比较中都不成功,但对照分析表明这并不影响我们的结果。此外,在基于精神状态和基于行动的条件下都发现了任何表现差异,这反映了先前的工作,并提出了有关所使用任务的领域特异性的问题。结论:我们的研究结果为自闭症文献的范式转变提供了支持,超越了基于缺陷的模型,并承认了社会互动的内在关系本质。我们进一步讨论了我们的研究结果如何表明,日本自闭症成年人的普通社会认知措施的文化可转移性有限,而不是优越的心智化能力,强调需要更多的跨文化研究和开发文化敏感的科学和诊断工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Molecular Autism
Molecular Autism GENETICS & HEREDITY-NEUROSCIENCES
CiteScore
12.10
自引率
1.60%
发文量
44
审稿时长
17 weeks
期刊介绍: Molecular Autism is a peer-reviewed, open access journal that publishes high-quality basic, translational and clinical research that has relevance to the etiology, pathobiology, or treatment of autism and related neurodevelopmental conditions. Research that includes integration across levels is encouraged. Molecular Autism publishes empirical studies, reviews, and brief communications.
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