4.2 Article

Event-related potentials of self-face recognition in children with pervasive developmental disorders

Journal

BRAIN & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 31, Issue 2, Pages 139-147

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.braindev.2008.04.011

Keywords

PDD, pervasive developmental disorders; AD, autistic disorders; Children; Face; Self-awareness; N170; EPN, early posterior negativity; P300; MNS, mirror neuron system

Funding

  1. Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare of Japan [H16-Kokoro-001]
  2. JST
  3. MEXT [700324]

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Patients with pervasive developmental disorders (PDD) often have difficulty reading facial expressions and deciphering their implied meaning. We focused on semantic encoding related to face cognition to investigate event-related potentials (ERPs) to the subject's own face and familiar faces in children with and without PDD. Eight children with PDD (seven boys and one girl; aged 10.8 +/- 2.9 years; one left-handed) and nine age-matched typically developing children (four boys and five girls; aged 11.3 +/- 2.3 years: one left-handed) participated in this study. The stimuli consisted of three face images (self, familiar, and unfamiliar faces), one scrambled face image, and one object image (e.g., cup) with gray scale. We confirmed three major components: N170 and early posterior negativity (EPN) in the occipito-temporal regions (T5 and T6) and P300 in the parietal region (Pz). An enhanced N170 was observed as a face-specific response in all subjects. However, semantic encoding of each face might be unrelated to N170 because the amplitude and latency were not significantly different among the face conditions. On the other hand, an additional component after N170, EPN which was calculated in each subtracted waveform (self vs. familiar and familiar vs. unfamiliar), indicated self-awareness and familiarity with respect to face cognition in the control adults and children. Furthermore, the P300 amplitude in (the Control adults was significantly greater in the self-face condition than in the familiar-face condition. However, no significant differences in the EPN and P300 components were observed among the self-, familiar-, and unfamiliar-face conditions in the PDD children. The results Suggest a deficit of semantic encoding of faces in children with PDD, which may be implicated in their delay in social communication. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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