4 research outputs found

    Investigating facial expression production and inner outer face recognition in children with autism and typically developing children.

    Get PDF
    Behavioural and neuroimaging evidence suggests that autism is characterised, in part, by deficits in social intelligence. Impairments in face and eye gaze processing and facial expression recognition are often used to explain this deficit. Although the general consensus is that children with autism are impaired in face and facial expression processing the actual seat of impairment is unknown. Furthermore, face recognition using only inner face information and facial expression production without any visual cues has never been investigated in children with autism. Research on the development of face recognition abilities provided mixed results with regard to how children identify unfamiliar faces both in typical and atypical populations. Recognising an unfamiliar face from only inner face has not been investigated during development or in children with autism. This thesis investigated unfamiliar face recognition from inner face only information firstly, during developmental period of 5-10 years of age; and secondly, with children with autism and individually matched controls. 5-l0-year-olds were exceptionally good at face recognition from only inner face information. Children with autism were as good as the matched controls in recognising unfamiliar faces from only inner face information. These findings are discussed with reference to holistic face processing ability and perceptual sameness of the stimuli. Research on the development of facial expression recognition indicates a differential pathway for different expressions both in typical and atypical populations. This thesis investigated facial expression production ability with and without context in children with autism and individually matched controls. Children with autism were atypical in fear facial expression production and failed to use context to enhance performance. These findings are discussed with reference to social intelligence and the role of experience in early childhood in development of face expertise

    Face processing in children with autism spectrum disorder: independent or interactive processing of facial identity and facial expression?

    No full text
    International audienceThe current study investigated if deficits in processing emotional expression affect facial identity processing and vice versa in children with autism spectrum disorder. Children with autism and IQ and age matched typically developing children classified faces either by emotional expression, thereby ignoring facial identity or by facial identity disregarding emotional expression. Typically developing children processed facial identity independently from facial expressions but processed facial expressions in interaction with identity. Children with autism processed both facial expression and identity independently of each other. They selectively directed their attention to one facial parameter despite variations in the other. Results indicate that there is no interaction in processing facial identity and emotional expression in autism spectrum disorder
    corecore