Eye-Gaze Analyis of Facial Emotion Expression in Adolescents with ASD

Prior research has shown that both emotion recognition and expression in children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) differs from that of typically developing children, and that these differences may contribute to observed social impairment. This study extends prior research in this area with an in...

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Main Author: Trubanova, Andrea
Other Authors: Psychology
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Tech 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/78046
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-12012015-160236/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-780462020-09-29T05:41:34Z Eye-Gaze Analyis of Facial Emotion Expression in Adolescents with ASD Trubanova, Andrea Psychology White, Susan W. Ollendick, Thomas H. Panneton, Robin K. autism spectrum disorder emotion recognition emotion expression eye-tracking Prior research has shown that both emotion recognition and expression in children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) differs from that of typically developing children, and that these differences may contribute to observed social impairment. This study extends prior research in this area with an integrated examination of both expression and recognition of emotion, and evaluation of spontaneous generation of emotional expression in response to another person's emotion, a behavior that is characteristically deficient in ASD. The aim of this study was to assess eye gaze patterns during scripted and spontaneous emotion expression tasks, and to assess quality of emotional expression in relation to gaze patterns. Youth with ASD fixated less to the eye region of stimuli showing surprise (F(1,19.88) = 4.76, p = .04 for spontaneous task; F(1,19.88) = 3.93, p = .06 for the recognition task), and they expressed emotion less clearly than did the typically developing sample (F(1, 35) = 6.38, p = .02) in the spontaneous task, but there was not a significant group difference in the scripted task across the emotions. Results do not, however, suggest altered eye gaze as a candidate mechanism for decreased ability to express an emotion. Findings from this research inform our understanding of the social difficulties associated with emotion recognition and expression deficits. Master of Science 2017-06-13T19:43:34Z 2017-06-13T19:43:34Z 2015-11-20 2015-12-01 2016-01-10 2016-01-10 Thesis Text etd-12012015-160236 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/78046 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-12012015-160236/ en_US In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic autism spectrum disorder
emotion recognition
emotion expression
eye-tracking
spellingShingle autism spectrum disorder
emotion recognition
emotion expression
eye-tracking
Trubanova, Andrea
Eye-Gaze Analyis of Facial Emotion Expression in Adolescents with ASD
description Prior research has shown that both emotion recognition and expression in children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) differs from that of typically developing children, and that these differences may contribute to observed social impairment. This study extends prior research in this area with an integrated examination of both expression and recognition of emotion, and evaluation of spontaneous generation of emotional expression in response to another person's emotion, a behavior that is characteristically deficient in ASD. The aim of this study was to assess eye gaze patterns during scripted and spontaneous emotion expression tasks, and to assess quality of emotional expression in relation to gaze patterns. Youth with ASD fixated less to the eye region of stimuli showing surprise (F(1,19.88) = 4.76, p = .04 for spontaneous task; F(1,19.88) = 3.93, p = .06 for the recognition task), and they expressed emotion less clearly than did the typically developing sample (F(1, 35) = 6.38, p = .02) in the spontaneous task, but there was not a significant group difference in the scripted task across the emotions. Results do not, however, suggest altered eye gaze as a candidate mechanism for decreased ability to express an emotion. Findings from this research inform our understanding of the social difficulties associated with emotion recognition and expression deficits. === Master of Science
author2 Psychology
author_facet Psychology
Trubanova, Andrea
author Trubanova, Andrea
author_sort Trubanova, Andrea
title Eye-Gaze Analyis of Facial Emotion Expression in Adolescents with ASD
title_short Eye-Gaze Analyis of Facial Emotion Expression in Adolescents with ASD
title_full Eye-Gaze Analyis of Facial Emotion Expression in Adolescents with ASD
title_fullStr Eye-Gaze Analyis of Facial Emotion Expression in Adolescents with ASD
title_full_unstemmed Eye-Gaze Analyis of Facial Emotion Expression in Adolescents with ASD
title_sort eye-gaze analyis of facial emotion expression in adolescents with asd
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/78046
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-12012015-160236/
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