Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (Jun 2020)

A Nexus Model of Restricted Interests in Autism Spectrum Disorder

  • R. McKell Carter,
  • R. McKell Carter,
  • Heejung Jung,
  • Heejung Jung,
  • Judy Reaven,
  • Audrey Blakeley-Smith,
  • Gabriel S. Dichter,
  • Gabriel S. Dichter,
  • Gabriel S. Dichter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2020.00212
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Restricted interests (RIs) in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are clinically impairing interests of unusual focus or intensity. They are a subtype of restricted and repetitive behaviors which are one of two diagnostic criteria for the disorder. Despite the near ubiquity of RIs in ASD, the neural basis for their development is not well understood. However, recent cognitive neuroscience findings from nonclinical samples and from individuals with ASD shed light on neural mechanisms that may explain the emergence of RIs. We propose the nexus model of RIs in ASD, a novel conceptualization of this symptom domain that suggests that RIs may reflect a co-opting of brain systems that typically serve to integrate complex attention, memory, semantic, and social communication functions during development. The nexus model of RIs hypothesizes that when social communicative development is compromised, brain functions typically located within the lateral surface of cortex may expand into social processing brain systems and alter cortical representations of various cognitive functions during development. These changes, in turn, promote the development of RIs as an alternative process mediated by these brain networks. The nexus model of RIs makes testable predictions about reciprocal relations between the impaired development of social communication and the emergence of RIs in ASD and suggests novel avenues for treatment development.

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