Adaptation and serial choice bias for low-level visual features are unaltered in autistic adolescents
Publication year
2022Number of pages
20 p.
Source
Journal of Vision, 22, 6, (2022), article 1ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
SW OZ DCC CO
PI Group Predictive Brain
PI Group Memory & Emotion
Cognitive Neuroscience
Journal title
Journal of Vision
Volume
vol. 22
Issue
iss. 6
Languages used
English (eng)
Subject
130 000 Cognitive Neurology & Memory; 180 000 Predictive Brain; Action, intention, and motor control; Radboudumc 7: Neurodevelopmental disorders DCMN: Donders Center for Medical NeuroscienceAbstract
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD), or autism, is characterized by social and non-social symptoms, including sensory hyper- and hyposensitivities. A suggestion has been put forward that some of these symptoms could be explained by differences in how sensory information is integrated with its context, including a lower tendency to leverage the past in the processing of new perceptual input. At least two history-dependent effects of opposite directions have been described in the visual perception literature: a repulsive adaptation effect, where perception of a stimulus is biased away from an adaptor stimulus, and an attractive serial choice bias, where perceptual choices are biased toward the previous choice. In this study, we investigated whether autistic participants differed in either bias from typically developing controls (TDs). Sixty-four adolescent participants (31 with ASD, 33 TDs) were asked to categorize oriented line stimuli in two tasks that were designed so that we would induce either adaptation or serial choice bias. Although our tasks successfully induced both biases, in comparing the two groups we found no differences in the magnitude of adaptation nor in the modulation of perceptual choices by the previous choice. In conclusion, we find no evidence of a decreased integration of the past in visual perception of low-level stimulus features in autistic adolescents.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [232207]
- Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [3766]
- Electronic publications [115401]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [89084]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [29104]
- Open Access publications [82705]
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