刺激历史的快速更新揭示了自闭症患者薄弱的人脸内部表征。

Marissa Hartston, Tal Lulav-Bash, Yael Goldstein-Marcusohn, Galia Avidan, Bat-Sheva Hadad
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自闭症谱系障碍中的非典型感知已被广泛报道,特别是人脸识别方面的缺陷,被认为与这些人的社交障碍密切相关。然而,目前仍存在以下争议:(a) 这些缺陷是否基于知觉;(b) 自闭症患者基于经验的人脸知觉表征的完善有何作用。我们研究了短期和长期经验刺激史对人脸加工的影响。自闭症患者和非自闭症患者在连续辨别任务中进行了同异判断。通过测试人脸表征对其取样范围内变形人脸的平均值的引力(回归平均值),对刺激统计量的使用进行了测量。结果表明,与非自闭症患者不同,自闭症患者对自己和其他种族面孔的表征同样受到刺激统计数据的影响。此外,自闭症患者使用的是最近接触的面孔,并没有根据整体经验形成强大的内部表征,这表明 "典型 "平均面孔的内部模型较弱。这种累积的面孔历史可能是典型面孔特化的基础,因此可能是自闭症患者对自己种族面孔的特化减少的原因。这些结果揭示了自闭症患者处理和识别面孔的方式,以及非典型面孔感知的基本机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Fast updating of stimulus history reveals weak internal representations of faces in autism.

Atypical perception has been widely reported in autism spectrum disorders, and deficits in face recognition, specifically, are argued to be closely associated with social impairment experienced by these individuals. However, it is still debated (a) whether deficits are perceptually based, and (b) what the role is of experience-based refinements of perceptual face representations in autism. We investigated the effect of short- and long-term experienced stimulus history on face processing. Autistic and non-autistic individuals performed same-different judgments in a serial discrimination task where two consecutive faces were drawn from a distribution of morphed faces. Use of stimulus statistics was measured by testing the gravitation of face representations towards, the mean of a range of morphed faces around which they were sampled (regression-to-the-mean). The results show that unlike non-autistic individuals, representations of own- and other-race faces were equally biased by stimulus statistics in autistic individuals. Moreover, autistic individuals used the most recently exposed faces without forming a strong internal representation based on the overall experienced faces, indicating a weaker internal model of the "typical" averaged face. This accumulated history of faces may underlie typical face specialization, and thus may account for the reduced specialization for own-race faces shown in autism. The results shed light on the way autistic people process and recognize faces, and on the basic mechanisms underlying atypical face perception.

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