Frontiers in Psychiatry (Mar 2021)

Social Attention Deficits in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder: Task Dependence of Objects vs. Faces Observation Bias

  • Susana Mouga,
  • Susana Mouga,
  • Susana Mouga,
  • Susana Mouga,
  • João Castelhano,
  • João Castelhano,
  • Cátia Café,
  • Daniela Sousa,
  • Daniela Sousa,
  • Daniela Sousa,
  • Frederico Duque,
  • Frederico Duque,
  • Frederico Duque,
  • Frederico Duque,
  • Frederico Duque,
  • Guiomar Oliveira,
  • Guiomar Oliveira,
  • Guiomar Oliveira,
  • Guiomar Oliveira,
  • Guiomar Oliveira,
  • Miguel Castelo-Branco,
  • Miguel Castelo-Branco,
  • Miguel Castelo-Branco

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2021.640599
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Social attention deficits represent a central impairment of patients suffering from autism spectrum disorder (ASD), but the nature of such deficits remains controversial. We compared visual attention regarding social (faces) vs. non-social stimuli (objects), in an ecological diagnostic context, in 46 children and adolescents divided in two groups: ASD (N = 23) and typical neurodevelopment (TD) (N = 23), matched for chronological age and intellectual performance. Eye-tracking measures of visual scanning, while exploring and describing scenes from three different tasks from the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS), were analyzed: “Description of a Picture,” “Cartoons,” and “Telling a Story from a Book.” Our analyses revealed a three-way interaction between Group, Task, and Social vs. Object Stimuli. We found a striking main effect of group and a task dependence of attentional allocation: while the TD attended first and longer to faces, ASD participants became similar to TD when they were asked to look at pictures while telling a story. Our results suggest that social attention allocation is task dependent, raising the question whether spontaneous attention deficits can be rescued by guiding goal-directed actions.

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