Autism and the Extraction of Emotion From Briefly Presented Facial Expressions: Stumbling at the First Step of Empathy
Identification of other people's emotion from quickly presented stimuli, including facial expressions, is fundamental to many social processes, including rapid mimicry and empathy. This study examined extraction of valence from brief emotional expressions in adults with autism spectrum disorder...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Emotion (Washington, D.C.) D.C.), 2008-12, Vol.8 (6), p.803-809 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Identification of other people's emotion
from quickly presented stimuli, including facial
expressions, is fundamental to many social processes,
including rapid mimicry and empathy. This study examined
extraction of valence from brief emotional expressions in
adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), a condition
characterized by impairments in understanding and sharing of
emotions. Control participants were individuals with reading
disability and typical individuals. Participants were shown
images for durations in the range of microexpressions (15 ms
and 30 ms), thus reducing the reliance on higher level
cognitive skills. Participants detected whether (a)
emotional faces were happy or angry, (b) neutral faces were
male or female, and (c) neutral images were animals or
objects. Individuals with ASD performed selectively worse on
emotion extraction, with no group differences for gender or
animal-object tasks. The emotion extraction
deficit remains even when controlling for gender, verbal
ability, and age and is not accounted for by
speed-accuracy tradeoffs. The deficit in rapid
emotional processing may contribute to ASD difficulties in
mimicry, empathy, and related processes. The results
highlight the role of rapid early emotion processing in
adaptive social-emotional functioning. |
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ISSN: | 1528-3542 1931-1516 |
DOI: | 10.1037/a0014124 |