Published March 2001 | Version Published
Journal Article Open

Abnormal processing of social information from faces in autism

Abstract

Autism has been thought to be characterized, in part, by dysfunction in emotional and social cognition, but the pathology of the underlying processes and their neural substrates remain poorly understood. Several studies have hypothesized that abnormal amygdala function may account for some of the impairments seen in autism, specifically, impaired recognition of socially relevant information from faces. We explored this issue in eight high-functioning subjects with autism in four experiments that assessed recognition of emotional and social information, primarily from faces. All tasks used were identical to those previously used in studies of subjects with bilateral amygdala damage, permitting direct comparisons. All subjects with autism made abnormal social judgments regarding the trustworthiness of faces; however, all were able to make normal social judgments from lexical stimuli, and all had a normal ability to perceptually discriminate the stimuli. Overall, these data from subjects with autism show some parallels to those from neurological subjects with focal amygdala damage. We suggest that amygdala dysfunction in autism might contribute to an impaired ability to link visual perception of socially relevant stimuli with retrieval of social knowledge and with elicitation of social behavior.

Additional Information

© 2001 The MIT Press. We thank Jeremy Nath and Ashok Jansari for help in testing subjects. Supported in part by grants from NIMH, the Sloan Foundation, and the EJLB Foundation to R.A.

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Identifiers

Eprint ID
4465
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:ADOjcn01

Funding

National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
EJLB Foundation

Dates

Created
2006-08-24
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Updated
2019-10-02
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