Face Processing Patterns of Persons with Asperger Syndrome : an Eye Tracking Study

One of the main diagnostic criteria for Asperger Syndrome is a severe social impairment (American Psychiatric Association [DSM-IV-TR] 2000), something that has often been connected to a more specific impairment in facial recognition. However, the main diagnostic tool (the DSM-IV-TR) has received muc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bram, Staffan, Lönebrink, Mikael
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Linköpings universitet, Institutionen för datavetenskap 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-69073
id ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-liu-69073
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-liu-690732013-01-08T13:30:56ZFace Processing Patterns of Persons with Asperger Syndrome : an Eye Tracking StudyengBram, StaffanLönebrink, MikaelLinköpings universitet, Institutionen för datavetenskapLinköpings universitet, Institutionen för datavetenskap2011Asperger syndromeface recognitionvisual acuityconjunction erroreye trackingCognitive scienceKognitionsforskningOne of the main diagnostic criteria for Asperger Syndrome is a severe social impairment (American Psychiatric Association [DSM-IV-TR] 2000), something that has often been connected to a more specific impairment in facial recognition. However, the main diagnostic tool (the DSM-IV-TR) has received much criticism during later years and is soon to be revised (Woodbury-Smith & Volkmar 2009). Among other things, many researchers claim that the diagnosis should be complemented with a sliding scale of severity (Ring, Woodbury-Smith, Watson, Wheelright & Baron-Cohen 2008). The use of facial information is central in the social interaction of humans, evident in the special patterns of visual scanning that people employ for facial stimuli (Yarbus 1967). Because of that, this symptom of Asperger Syndrome has become a high research priority. The impairment in facial recognition has been connected to a bias towards detail based processing (McPartland, Webb, Keehn & Dawson 2010). A recent study also connects this to an unusually high visual acuity, which could result in a disposition to focus on small facial features. In the present study. facial stimuli were prepared to provoke memory conjunction errors. This type of memory error means that a person erroneously claims to recognize a face assembled by pieces of previously shown stimuli. If a person is more prone to do so, that would imply that he or she is more focused on details than on configural information (Danielsson 2006). Two groups were tested, one consisting of non-diagnosed adults and one of adults diagnosed with Asperger Syndrome. A test for visual acuity was administered, which was followed by a series of facial recognition tasks. Responses in the latter part were given with a computer mouse, and eye fixations were recorded using a head mounted eye-tracking device. Three hypotheses were formulated. First, persons with AS were expected to perform more poorly in all facial recognition tasks. Second, persons with AS were expected to make more conjunction errors than test group subjects. Finally, persons with AS were expected to display a mean visual acuity significantly higher than that of the test group. However, no significant differences emerged between the groups in relation to either of the hypotheses, and results could not be referred to flaws in the experimental setup. Therefore, these results are taken to display the heterogeneity of the Asperger Syndrome population, and possibly the importance of early training measures to compensate for social impairments. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-69073application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Asperger syndrome
face recognition
visual acuity
conjunction error
eye tracking
Cognitive science
Kognitionsforskning
spellingShingle Asperger syndrome
face recognition
visual acuity
conjunction error
eye tracking
Cognitive science
Kognitionsforskning
Bram, Staffan
Lönebrink, Mikael
Face Processing Patterns of Persons with Asperger Syndrome : an Eye Tracking Study
description One of the main diagnostic criteria for Asperger Syndrome is a severe social impairment (American Psychiatric Association [DSM-IV-TR] 2000), something that has often been connected to a more specific impairment in facial recognition. However, the main diagnostic tool (the DSM-IV-TR) has received much criticism during later years and is soon to be revised (Woodbury-Smith & Volkmar 2009). Among other things, many researchers claim that the diagnosis should be complemented with a sliding scale of severity (Ring, Woodbury-Smith, Watson, Wheelright & Baron-Cohen 2008). The use of facial information is central in the social interaction of humans, evident in the special patterns of visual scanning that people employ for facial stimuli (Yarbus 1967). Because of that, this symptom of Asperger Syndrome has become a high research priority. The impairment in facial recognition has been connected to a bias towards detail based processing (McPartland, Webb, Keehn & Dawson 2010). A recent study also connects this to an unusually high visual acuity, which could result in a disposition to focus on small facial features. In the present study. facial stimuli were prepared to provoke memory conjunction errors. This type of memory error means that a person erroneously claims to recognize a face assembled by pieces of previously shown stimuli. If a person is more prone to do so, that would imply that he or she is more focused on details than on configural information (Danielsson 2006). Two groups were tested, one consisting of non-diagnosed adults and one of adults diagnosed with Asperger Syndrome. A test for visual acuity was administered, which was followed by a series of facial recognition tasks. Responses in the latter part were given with a computer mouse, and eye fixations were recorded using a head mounted eye-tracking device. Three hypotheses were formulated. First, persons with AS were expected to perform more poorly in all facial recognition tasks. Second, persons with AS were expected to make more conjunction errors than test group subjects. Finally, persons with AS were expected to display a mean visual acuity significantly higher than that of the test group. However, no significant differences emerged between the groups in relation to either of the hypotheses, and results could not be referred to flaws in the experimental setup. Therefore, these results are taken to display the heterogeneity of the Asperger Syndrome population, and possibly the importance of early training measures to compensate for social impairments.
author Bram, Staffan
Lönebrink, Mikael
author_facet Bram, Staffan
Lönebrink, Mikael
author_sort Bram, Staffan
title Face Processing Patterns of Persons with Asperger Syndrome : an Eye Tracking Study
title_short Face Processing Patterns of Persons with Asperger Syndrome : an Eye Tracking Study
title_full Face Processing Patterns of Persons with Asperger Syndrome : an Eye Tracking Study
title_fullStr Face Processing Patterns of Persons with Asperger Syndrome : an Eye Tracking Study
title_full_unstemmed Face Processing Patterns of Persons with Asperger Syndrome : an Eye Tracking Study
title_sort face processing patterns of persons with asperger syndrome : an eye tracking study
publisher Linköpings universitet, Institutionen för datavetenskap
publishDate 2011
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-69073
work_keys_str_mv AT bramstaffan faceprocessingpatternsofpersonswithaspergersyndromeaneyetrackingstudy
AT lonebrinkmikael faceprocessingpatternsofpersonswithaspergersyndromeaneyetrackingstudy
_version_ 1716522523816886272