Face processing in high-functioning adolescents with autism: Evidence for weak central coherence
Face processing in high-functioning adolescents with autism: Evidence for weak central coherence
Seventeen adolescents with autism and seventeen typically developing children, matched for chronological age, were tested in a whole versus part paradigm in which participants matched a face target either to a complete face or to a face feature. Previous studies showed an accuracy advantage in whole-face matching, indicating a holistic processing advantage for adults (Donnelly & Davidoff, 1999). It has been suggested that individuals with autism have difficulty in holistic processing, however the extent to which this difficulty may be moderated by attentional cues is uncertain. The present study included a condition that cued participants to the relevant face feature for matching. In the comparison group, the cue did not moderate the whole-face matching advantage. In the participants with autism, cueing generated a whole-face advantage, while uncued stimuli showed no difference between whole face and feature matching. This suggests that a lack of holistic processing in face processing, which is associated with individuals with autism, can be moderated with cueing. The implications for weak central coherence theory are discussed.
673-688
Lopez, Beatiz
7ae37af1-ebc1-48ce-bdc1-8ea9a91dad7b
Donnelly, Nick
05c83b6b-ee8d-4c9d-85dc-c5dcd6b5427b
Hadwin, Julie A.
a364caf0-405a-42f3-a04c-4864817393ee
Leekam, Susan R.
1c02bbf3-8878-4286-acb8-3174ae8ca510
2004
Lopez, Beatiz
7ae37af1-ebc1-48ce-bdc1-8ea9a91dad7b
Donnelly, Nick
05c83b6b-ee8d-4c9d-85dc-c5dcd6b5427b
Hadwin, Julie A.
a364caf0-405a-42f3-a04c-4864817393ee
Leekam, Susan R.
1c02bbf3-8878-4286-acb8-3174ae8ca510
Lopez, Beatiz, Donnelly, Nick, Hadwin, Julie A. and Leekam, Susan R.
(2004)
Face processing in high-functioning adolescents with autism: Evidence for weak central coherence.
Visual Cognition, 11 (6), .
(doi:10.1080/13506280344000437).
Abstract
Seventeen adolescents with autism and seventeen typically developing children, matched for chronological age, were tested in a whole versus part paradigm in which participants matched a face target either to a complete face or to a face feature. Previous studies showed an accuracy advantage in whole-face matching, indicating a holistic processing advantage for adults (Donnelly & Davidoff, 1999). It has been suggested that individuals with autism have difficulty in holistic processing, however the extent to which this difficulty may be moderated by attentional cues is uncertain. The present study included a condition that cued participants to the relevant face feature for matching. In the comparison group, the cue did not moderate the whole-face matching advantage. In the participants with autism, cueing generated a whole-face advantage, while uncued stimuli showed no difference between whole face and feature matching. This suggests that a lack of holistic processing in face processing, which is associated with individuals with autism, can be moderated with cueing. The implications for weak central coherence theory are discussed.
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Published date: 2004
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Local EPrints ID: 40190
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/40190
ISSN: 1350-6285
PURE UUID: 274a3ddb-9b7c-4fff-b558-292cae184ef4
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Date deposited: 03 Jul 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 08:17
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Author:
Beatiz Lopez
Author:
Nick Donnelly
Author:
Susan R. Leekam
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