Autism and classical eyeblink conditioning: Performance changes of the conditioned response related to autism spectrum disorder diagnosis

Changes in the timing performance of conditioned responses (CRs) acquired during trace and delay eyeblink conditioning (EBC) are presented for diagnostic subgroups of children having autism spectrum disorder (ASD) aged 6-15 years. Children diagnosed with autistic disorder (AD) were analyzed separate...

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Main Authors: John P Welsh, Jeff T Oristaglio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2016.00137/full
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spelling doaj-16cfd02692d74c00b47b26908c3e7b932020-11-25T00:59:01ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychiatry1664-06402016-08-01710.3389/fpsyt.2016.00137174063Autism and classical eyeblink conditioning: Performance changes of the conditioned response related to autism spectrum disorder diagnosisJohn P Welsh0Jeff T Oristaglio1University of WashingtonDrexel University College of MedicineChanges in the timing performance of conditioned responses (CRs) acquired during trace and delay eyeblink conditioning (EBC) are presented for diagnostic subgroups of children having autism spectrum disorder (ASD) aged 6-15 years. Children diagnosed with autistic disorder (AD) were analyzed separately from children diagnosed with either Asperger’s syndrome or Pervasive-developmental disorder not-otherwise-specified (Asp/PDD) and compared to an age- and IQ-matched group of children that were typically developing (TD). Within-subject and between-groups contrasts in CR performance on sequential exposure to trace and delay EBC were analyzed to determine whether any differences would expose underlying functional heterogeneities of the cerebral and cerebellar systems in ASD subgroups. The EBC parameters measured were percentage CRs, CR onset latency, and CR peak latency. Neither AD nor Asp/PDD groups were impaired in CR acquisition during trace or delay EBC. AD and Asp/PDD both altered CR timing, but not always in the same way. Although the AD group showed normal CR timing during trace EBC, the Asp/PDD group showed a significant 27 and 28 ms increase in CR onset and peak latency, respectively, during trace EBC. In contrast, the direction of the timing change was opposite during delay EBC, during which the Asp/PDD group showed a significant 29 ms decrease in CR onset latency and the AD group showed a larger 77 ms decrease in CR onset latency. Only the AD group showed a decrease in CR peak latency during delay EBC, demonstrating another difference between AD and Asp/PDD. The difference in CR onset latency during delay EBC for both AD and Asp/PDD was due to an abnormal prevalence of early onset CRs that were intermixed with CRs having normal timing, as observed both in CR onset histograms and mean CR waveforms. In conclusion, significant heterogeneity in EBC performance was apparent within diagnostic groups, and this may indicate that EBC performance can report the heterogeneity in the neurobiological predispositions for ASD. The findings will inform further explorations with larger cohorts, different sensory modalities, and different EBC paradigms and provide a reference set for future EBC studies of children having ASD and non-human models.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2016.00137/fullCerebellumautismtimingeyeblink conditioningDiagnostic specificity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John P Welsh
Jeff T Oristaglio
spellingShingle John P Welsh
Jeff T Oristaglio
Autism and classical eyeblink conditioning: Performance changes of the conditioned response related to autism spectrum disorder diagnosis
Frontiers in Psychiatry
Cerebellum
autism
timing
eyeblink conditioning
Diagnostic specificity
author_facet John P Welsh
Jeff T Oristaglio
author_sort John P Welsh
title Autism and classical eyeblink conditioning: Performance changes of the conditioned response related to autism spectrum disorder diagnosis
title_short Autism and classical eyeblink conditioning: Performance changes of the conditioned response related to autism spectrum disorder diagnosis
title_full Autism and classical eyeblink conditioning: Performance changes of the conditioned response related to autism spectrum disorder diagnosis
title_fullStr Autism and classical eyeblink conditioning: Performance changes of the conditioned response related to autism spectrum disorder diagnosis
title_full_unstemmed Autism and classical eyeblink conditioning: Performance changes of the conditioned response related to autism spectrum disorder diagnosis
title_sort autism and classical eyeblink conditioning: performance changes of the conditioned response related to autism spectrum disorder diagnosis
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychiatry
issn 1664-0640
publishDate 2016-08-01
description Changes in the timing performance of conditioned responses (CRs) acquired during trace and delay eyeblink conditioning (EBC) are presented for diagnostic subgroups of children having autism spectrum disorder (ASD) aged 6-15 years. Children diagnosed with autistic disorder (AD) were analyzed separately from children diagnosed with either Asperger’s syndrome or Pervasive-developmental disorder not-otherwise-specified (Asp/PDD) and compared to an age- and IQ-matched group of children that were typically developing (TD). Within-subject and between-groups contrasts in CR performance on sequential exposure to trace and delay EBC were analyzed to determine whether any differences would expose underlying functional heterogeneities of the cerebral and cerebellar systems in ASD subgroups. The EBC parameters measured were percentage CRs, CR onset latency, and CR peak latency. Neither AD nor Asp/PDD groups were impaired in CR acquisition during trace or delay EBC. AD and Asp/PDD both altered CR timing, but not always in the same way. Although the AD group showed normal CR timing during trace EBC, the Asp/PDD group showed a significant 27 and 28 ms increase in CR onset and peak latency, respectively, during trace EBC. In contrast, the direction of the timing change was opposite during delay EBC, during which the Asp/PDD group showed a significant 29 ms decrease in CR onset latency and the AD group showed a larger 77 ms decrease in CR onset latency. Only the AD group showed a decrease in CR peak latency during delay EBC, demonstrating another difference between AD and Asp/PDD. The difference in CR onset latency during delay EBC for both AD and Asp/PDD was due to an abnormal prevalence of early onset CRs that were intermixed with CRs having normal timing, as observed both in CR onset histograms and mean CR waveforms. In conclusion, significant heterogeneity in EBC performance was apparent within diagnostic groups, and this may indicate that EBC performance can report the heterogeneity in the neurobiological predispositions for ASD. The findings will inform further explorations with larger cohorts, different sensory modalities, and different EBC paradigms and provide a reference set for future EBC studies of children having ASD and non-human models.
topic Cerebellum
autism
timing
eyeblink conditioning
Diagnostic specificity
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2016.00137/full
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AT jefftoristaglio autismandclassicaleyeblinkconditioningperformancechangesoftheconditionedresponserelatedtoautismspectrumdisorderdiagnosis
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