Authors
Saxon Goold, Melanie J Murphy, Melvyn A Goodale, Sheila G Crewther, Robin Laycock
Publication date
2022/11/26
Journal
Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology
Volume
44
Issue
10
Pages
755-767
Publisher
Routledge
Description
Introduction
Atypical visual and social attention has often been associated with clinically diagnosed autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and with the broader autism phenotype. Atypical social attention is of particular research interest given the importance of facial expressions for social communication, with faces tending to attract and hold attention in neurotypical individuals. In autism, this is not necessarily so, where there is debate about the temporal differences in the ability to disengage attention from a face.
Method
Thus, we have used eye-tracking to record saccadic latencies as a measure of time to disengage attention from a central task-irrelevant face before orienting to a newly presented peripheral nonsocial target during a gap-overlap task. Neurotypical participants with higher or lower autism-like traits (AT) completed the task that included central stimuli with varied expressions of facial emotion as well as an …
Total citations
2023202422
Scholar articles
S Goold, MJ Murphy, MA Goodale, SG Crewther… - Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology, 2022