Visuo-tactile integration in autism: atypical temporal binding may underlie greater reliance on proprioceptive information
Visuo-tactile integration in autism: atypical temporal binding may underlie greater reliance on proprioceptive information
Background
Evidence indicates that social functioning deficits and sensory sensitivities in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are related to atypical sensory integration. The exact mechanisms underlying these integration difficulties are unknown; however, two leading accounts are (1) an over-reliance on proprioception and (2) atypical visuo-tactile temporal binding. We directly tested these theories by selectively manipulating proprioceptive alignment and visuo-tactile synchrony to assess the extent that these impact upon body ownership.
Methods
Children with ASD and typically developing controls placed their hand into a multisensory illusion apparatus, which presented two, identical live video images of their own hand in the same plane as their actual hand. One virtual hand was aligned proprioceptively with the actual hand (the veridical hand), and the other was displaced to the left or right. While a brushstroke was applied to the participants’ actual (hidden) hand, they observed the two virtual images of their hand also being stroked and were asked to identify their real hand. During brushing, one of three different temporal delays was applied to either the displaced hand or the veridical hand. Thus, only one virtual hand had synchronous visuo-tactile inputs.
Results
Results showed that visuo-tactile synchrony overrides incongruent proprioceptive inputs in typically developing children but not in autistic children. Evidence for both temporally extended visuo-tactile binding and a greater reliance on proprioception are discussed.
Conclusions
This is the first study to provide definitive evidence for temporally extended visuo-tactile binding in ASD. This may result in reduced processing of amodal inputs (i.e. temporal synchrony) over modal-specific information (i.e. proprioception). This would likely lead to failures in appropriately binding information from related events, which would impact upon sensitivity to sensory stimuli, body representation and social processes such as empathy and imitation.
1-10
Greenfield, Katie
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Ropar, Danielle
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Smith, Alastair
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Newport, Roger
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Carey, Mark
03811afd-eb8a-4496-a1d8-fbf6e043dc3b
14 September 2015
Greenfield, Katie
070c2fb7-b7f1-4842-a9a5-db04252a7ed1
Ropar, Danielle
9b2bfacc-9047-4961-9cf3-874993e7c021
Smith, Alastair
60dc096d-d461-4991-9a80-b70106531b4f
Newport, Roger
b1b001a7-6dd1-46f7-98c3-90474d07f18b
Carey, Mark
03811afd-eb8a-4496-a1d8-fbf6e043dc3b
Greenfield, Katie, Ropar, Danielle, Smith, Alastair, Newport, Roger and Carey, Mark
(2015)
Visuo-tactile integration in autism: atypical temporal binding may underlie greater reliance on proprioceptive information.
Molecular Autism, 6 (51), .
(doi:10.1186/s13229-015-0045-9).
Abstract
Background
Evidence indicates that social functioning deficits and sensory sensitivities in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are related to atypical sensory integration. The exact mechanisms underlying these integration difficulties are unknown; however, two leading accounts are (1) an over-reliance on proprioception and (2) atypical visuo-tactile temporal binding. We directly tested these theories by selectively manipulating proprioceptive alignment and visuo-tactile synchrony to assess the extent that these impact upon body ownership.
Methods
Children with ASD and typically developing controls placed their hand into a multisensory illusion apparatus, which presented two, identical live video images of their own hand in the same plane as their actual hand. One virtual hand was aligned proprioceptively with the actual hand (the veridical hand), and the other was displaced to the left or right. While a brushstroke was applied to the participants’ actual (hidden) hand, they observed the two virtual images of their hand also being stroked and were asked to identify their real hand. During brushing, one of three different temporal delays was applied to either the displaced hand or the veridical hand. Thus, only one virtual hand had synchronous visuo-tactile inputs.
Results
Results showed that visuo-tactile synchrony overrides incongruent proprioceptive inputs in typically developing children but not in autistic children. Evidence for both temporally extended visuo-tactile binding and a greater reliance on proprioception are discussed.
Conclusions
This is the first study to provide definitive evidence for temporally extended visuo-tactile binding in ASD. This may result in reduced processing of amodal inputs (i.e. temporal synchrony) over modal-specific information (i.e. proprioception). This would likely lead to failures in appropriately binding information from related events, which would impact upon sensitivity to sensory stimuli, body representation and social processes such as empathy and imitation.
Text
s13229-015-0045-9
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 7 September 2015
Published date: 14 September 2015
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 427701
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/427701
ISSN: 2040-2392
PURE UUID: 16d07107-ff02-4a3c-864a-118c2b398032
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Date deposited: 25 Jan 2019 17:30
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 23:56
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Contributors
Author:
Danielle Ropar
Author:
Alastair Smith
Author:
Roger Newport
Author:
Mark Carey
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