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Mirror me: imitative responses in adults with autism

Mirror me: imitative responses in adults with autism
Mirror me: imitative responses in adults with autism

Dysfunctions of the human mirror neuron system have been postulated to underlie some deficits in autism spectrum disorders including poor imitative performance and impaired social skills. Using three reaction time experiments addressing mirror neuron system functions under simple and complex conditions, we examined 20 adult autism spectrum disorder participants and 20 healthy controls matched for age, gender and education. Participants performed simple finger-lifting movements in response to (1) biological finger and non-biological dot movement stimuli, (2) acoustic stimuli and (3) combined visual-acoustic stimuli with different contextual (compatible/incompatible) and temporal (simultaneous/asynchronous) relation. Mixed model analyses revealed slower reaction times in autism spectrum disorder. Both groups responded faster to biological compared to non-biological stimuli (Experiment 1) implying intact processing advantage for biological stimuli in autism spectrum disorder. In Experiment 3, both groups had similar 'interference effects' when stimuli were presented simultaneously. However, autism spectrum disorder participants had abnormally slow responses particularly when incompatible stimuli were presented consecutively. Our results suggest imitative control deficits rather than global imitative system impairments.

Adult, Autistic Disorder, Female, Humans, Imitative Behavior, Male, Photic Stimulation, Psychomotor Performance, Reaction Time, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
1362-3613
134-44
Schunke, Odette
aa9feb34-80a8-463a-ac58-3b2baba3826a
Schöttle, Daniel
57682798-f29d-44bd-b497-3896e4959dd8
Vettorazzi, Eik
b4f03b6f-d9dc-4bf9-bce4-1a5a2e8de364
Brandt, Valerie
e41f5832-70e4-407d-8a15-85b861761656
Kahl, Ursula
8eb7f05d-54f9-4825-8756-dc4b3004405e
Bäumer, Tobias
90576a00-054a-4ab7-952e-d50b175f4cec
Ganos, Christos
b79910d0-7d4b-4d5a-a051-b82cfb64dcea
David, Nicole
e1b57f27-ede6-4488-8a3f-45055e290638
Peiker, Ina
1217ca63-88ba-4b08-8185-95964aac0d01
Engel, Andreas K
4c9e2742-c147-46d6-b750-bcab4b5baf34
Brass, Marcel
96ac528f-3815-4631-8b7d-3fa2bf4c0aad
Münchau, Alexander
3254c1b7-9fd4-417d-96e2-b7bc1fe3c736
Schunke, Odette
aa9feb34-80a8-463a-ac58-3b2baba3826a
Schöttle, Daniel
57682798-f29d-44bd-b497-3896e4959dd8
Vettorazzi, Eik
b4f03b6f-d9dc-4bf9-bce4-1a5a2e8de364
Brandt, Valerie
e41f5832-70e4-407d-8a15-85b861761656
Kahl, Ursula
8eb7f05d-54f9-4825-8756-dc4b3004405e
Bäumer, Tobias
90576a00-054a-4ab7-952e-d50b175f4cec
Ganos, Christos
b79910d0-7d4b-4d5a-a051-b82cfb64dcea
David, Nicole
e1b57f27-ede6-4488-8a3f-45055e290638
Peiker, Ina
1217ca63-88ba-4b08-8185-95964aac0d01
Engel, Andreas K
4c9e2742-c147-46d6-b750-bcab4b5baf34
Brass, Marcel
96ac528f-3815-4631-8b7d-3fa2bf4c0aad
Münchau, Alexander
3254c1b7-9fd4-417d-96e2-b7bc1fe3c736

Schunke, Odette, Schöttle, Daniel, Vettorazzi, Eik, Brandt, Valerie, Kahl, Ursula, Bäumer, Tobias, Ganos, Christos, David, Nicole, Peiker, Ina, Engel, Andreas K, Brass, Marcel and Münchau, Alexander (2016) Mirror me: imitative responses in adults with autism. Autism, 20 (2), 134-44. (doi:10.1177/1362361315571757).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Dysfunctions of the human mirror neuron system have been postulated to underlie some deficits in autism spectrum disorders including poor imitative performance and impaired social skills. Using three reaction time experiments addressing mirror neuron system functions under simple and complex conditions, we examined 20 adult autism spectrum disorder participants and 20 healthy controls matched for age, gender and education. Participants performed simple finger-lifting movements in response to (1) biological finger and non-biological dot movement stimuli, (2) acoustic stimuli and (3) combined visual-acoustic stimuli with different contextual (compatible/incompatible) and temporal (simultaneous/asynchronous) relation. Mixed model analyses revealed slower reaction times in autism spectrum disorder. Both groups responded faster to biological compared to non-biological stimuli (Experiment 1) implying intact processing advantage for biological stimuli in autism spectrum disorder. In Experiment 3, both groups had similar 'interference effects' when stimuli were presented simultaneously. However, autism spectrum disorder participants had abnormally slow responses particularly when incompatible stimuli were presented consecutively. Our results suggest imitative control deficits rather than global imitative system impairments.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 13 March 2015
Published date: February 2016
Keywords: Adult, Autistic Disorder, Female, Humans, Imitative Behavior, Male, Photic Stimulation, Psychomotor Performance, Reaction Time, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 413242
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/413242
ISSN: 1362-3613
PURE UUID: 0f36e6ae-eaa2-4ab0-b3c0-9241d8c887d8

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Date deposited: 17 Aug 2017 16:31
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 12:38

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Contributors

Author: Odette Schunke
Author: Daniel Schöttle
Author: Eik Vettorazzi
Author: Valerie Brandt
Author: Ursula Kahl
Author: Tobias Bäumer
Author: Christos Ganos
Author: Nicole David
Author: Ina Peiker
Author: Andreas K Engel
Author: Marcel Brass
Author: Alexander Münchau

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