Distinct Face-Processing Strategies in Parents of Autistic Children
In his original description of autism, Kanner [1] noted that the parents of autistic children often exhibited unusual social behavior themselves, consistent with what we now know about the high heritability of autism [2]. We investigated this so-called Broad Autism Phenotype in the parents of childr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Current biology 2008-07, Vol.18 (14), p.1090-1093 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In his original description of autism, Kanner
[1] noted that the parents of autistic children often exhibited unusual social behavior themselves, consistent with what we now know about the high heritability of autism
[2]. We investigated this so-called Broad Autism Phenotype in the parents of children with autism, who themselves did not receive a diagnosis of any psychiatric illness. Building on recent quantifications of social cognition in autism
[3], we investigated face processing by using the “bubbles” method
[4] to measure how viewers make use of information from specific facial features in order to judge emotions. Parents of autistic children who were assessed as socially aloof (N = 15), a key component of the phenotype
[5], showed a remarkable reduction in processing the eye region in faces, together with enhanced processing of the mouth, compared to a control group of parents of neurotypical children (N = 20), as well as to nonaloof parents of autistic children (N = 27, whose pattern of face processing was intermediate). The pattern of face processing seen in the Broad Autism Phenotype showed striking similarities to that previously reported to occur in autism
[3] and for the first time provides a window into the endophenotype that may result from a subset of the genes that contribute to social cognition. |
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ISSN: | 0960-9822 1879-0445 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.cub.2008.06.073 |