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Greater reliance on proprioceptive information during a reaching task with perspective manipulation among children with autism spectrum disorders

Masahiro Hirai, Takeshi Sakurada, Jun Izawa, Takahiro Ikeda, Yukifumi Monden, Hideo Shimoizumi, Takanori Yamagata

2021Scientific Reports11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Difficulties with visual perspective-taking among individuals with autism spectrum disorders remain poorly understood. Many studies have presumed that first-person visual input can be mentally transformed to a third-person perspective during visual perspective-taking tasks; however, existing research has not fully revealed the computational strategy used by those with autism spectrum disorders for taking another person's perspective. In this study, we designed a novel approach to test a strategy using the opposite-directional effect among children with autism spectrum disorders. This effect refers to how a third-person perspective as a visual input alters a cognitive process. We directly manipulated participants' visual perspective by placing a camera at different positions; participants could watch themselves from a third-person perspective during a reaching task with no endpoint feedback. During a baseline task, endpoint bias (with endpoint feedback but no visual transformation) did not differ significantly between groups. However, the endpoint was affected by extrinsic coordinate information in the control group relative to the autism spectrum disorders group when the visual perspective was transformed. These results indicate an increased reliance on proprioception during the reaching task with perspective manipulation in the autism spectrum disorders group.

Topics & Concepts

ProprioceptionPerspective (graphical)Task (project management)AutismPhysical medicine and rehabilitationComputer scienceAutism spectrum disorderCognitive psychologyPsychologyHuman–computer interactionMedicineDevelopmental psychologyArtificial intelligenceEngineeringSystems engineeringCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchBehavioral and Psychological Studies
Greater reliance on proprioceptive information during a reaching task with perspective manipulation among children with autism spectrum disorders | Litcius