图像中不同数量的社会信息影响自闭症相关表型参与者的面部加工策略

Nidhila Masha, Jeff MacInnes, Elizabeth N. Johnson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自闭症谱系障碍(Autism spectrum disorder, ASD)是一种发展性疾病,表现为感官超载的倾向,以及社会认知和沟通的缺陷,这可能与面部处理策略的差异有关。先前的研究表明,在观看面部图像时,自闭症患者花在眼睛和嘴唇上的时间更少,而眼睛和嘴唇比脸部的其他部位包含更多的情感和社会信息。这项研究调查了自闭症相关表现型的个体是否为了减少他们经历感官过载的风险而避开面部图像的眼睛。具有或缺乏自闭症相关表型的神经正常参与者观看了从两组刺激中提取的图像:一组是彩色图像的控制组,另一组是由灰度和低对比度图像组成的实验组。人类已经被证明使用颜色作为社会信息的来源(例如,相对健康、性别、情感等);因此,实验集中的灰度图像比控制集中的彩色图像包含更少的社会相关信息。与对比度降低的图像相比,彩色图像的亮度和对比度也更高,这两者都是感官过载的潜在触发因素。结果显示,自闭症相关表型的参与者花在灰度图像上的时间比花在彩色图像上的时间更多。然而,当对比度降低的图像与彩色图像进行比较时,没有观察到这种效果。当将这些结果外推到具有真正自闭症表型的人群时,表明自闭症患者对灰度图像的处理可能与彩色图像不同。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Varying Amount of Social Information in an Image Affects Facial Processing Strategies of Participants with an Autism-Related Phenotype
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a developmental condition that presents with a tendency to experience sensory overload as well as deficits in social cognition and communication which may be associated with differences in facial processing strategies. Previous studies have shown that, when viewing a facial image, participants with ASD spend less time on the eyes and lips—which contain more emotional and social information than other areas of the face. This study investigates whether individuals with an autism-related phenotype avoid the eyes of facial images in order to reduce their risk of experiencing sensory overload. Neurotypical participants, either possessing or lacking an autism-related phenotype, viewed images drawn from two stimuli sets: a control set of color images and an experimental set consisting of grayscale and reduced contrast images. Humans have been shown to use color as a source of social information (e.g. relative health, sex, emotion, etc.); the grayscale images in the experimental set thus contained less socially relevant information than the color images in the control set. The color images also contained more brightness and contrast—both of which are potential triggers of sensory overload—than the reduced contrast images. The results revealed that participants with an autism-related phenotype spent more time focusing on the eyes of grayscale images than on the eye region in color images. However, this effect was not observed when reduced contrast images were compared to color images. These results, when extrapolated to a population with a true autism phenotype, suggest that individuals with autism may process grayscale images differently than color images.
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