Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
370044 Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders 2015 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Limited attention to other people's faces is a typical clinical feature of autism spectrum disorder (ASD).•While interacting with an adult, we measured how much children with ASD and a control group looked at the adult's face.•When listening to a children's story, the ASD group looked less at the adult's face than the controls.•When actively interacting with the adult during cognitive testing, gaze performance in the two groups was similar.•‘Social looking’ is a typical in children with ASD, but only in some contexts.

Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is characterized by socio-communicative impairments, and limited attention to other people's faces is thought to be an important underlying mechanism. Here, non-invasive eye-tracking technology was used to quantify the amount of time spent looking at another person's face during face-to-face communication in children with ASD (n = 13, age 6 years) and age and IQ-matched neurotypical children (n = 27, 6 years). We found that in one context of high ecological relevance – listening to an adult telling a children's story – children with ASD showed a markedly reduced tendency to look at the adult's face. In interactions between typical children and the adult, the amount of gaze to the other's face aligned between the two individuals. No such relation was found when the ASD group interacted with the adult. Despite these differences in the storytelling context, we also observed that social looking atypicalities did not generalize to another and more structured context, implying that social looking cannot not be considered fundamentally disrupted in children with ASD.

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