4.5 Article

Face-Processing Performance is an Independent Predictor of Social Affect as Measured by the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule Across Large-Scale Datasets

Journal

JOURNAL OF AUTISM AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS
Volume 52, Issue 2, Pages 674-688

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10803-021-04971-4

Keywords

Face perception; Face processing; Face discrimination; Social interaction; Social cognition; Autism spectrum disorder

Funding

  1. Shields Research grant from the Child Neurology Foundation
  2. NIH/NIMH [K23MH120510]

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The study found a strong relationship between face-processing deficits and social impact in individuals with ASD, highlighting the importance of face discrimination as a key covariate for the severity of ASD symptoms.
Face-processing deficits, while not required for the diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), have been associated with impaired social skills-a core feature of ASD; however, the strength and prevalence of this relationship remains unclear. Across 445 participants from the NIMH Data Archive, we examined the relationship between Benton Face Recognition Test (BFRT) performance and Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule-Social Affect (ADOS-SA) scores. Lower BFRT scores (worse face-processing performance) were associated with higher ADOS-SA scores (higher ASD severity)-a relationship that held after controlling for other factors associated with face processing, i.e., age, sex, and IQ. These findings underscore the utility of face discrimination, not just recognition of facial emotion, as a key covariate for the severity of symptoms that characterize ASD.

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