Interpersonal predictive coding, not action perception, is impaired in autism

Author:

von der Lühe T.1,Manera V.2,Barisic I.3,Becchio C.45,Vogeley K.16,Schilbach L.17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital Cologne, 50937 Cologne, Germany

2. CoBtek Laboratory, University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, 06103 Nice, France

3. Cognitive Science Department, ETH Zürich, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland

4. C'MON Cognition Motion and Neuroscience Unit, Fondazione Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Genova, Italy

5. Department of Psychology, University of Turin, Turin, Italy

6. Research Centre Juelich, Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine (INM-3), 52428 Juelich, Germany

7. Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, 80804 Munich, Germany

Abstract

This study was conducted to examine interpersonal predictive coding in individuals with high-functioning autism (HFA). Healthy and HFA participants observed point-light displays of two agents (A and B) performing separate actions. In the ‘communicative’ condition, the action performed by agent B responded to a communicative gesture performed by agent A. In the ‘individual’ condition, agent A's communicative action was substituted by a non-communicative action. Using a simultaneous masking-detection task, we demonstrate that observing agent A's communicative gesture enhanced visual discrimination of agent B for healthy controls, but not for participants with HFA. These results were not explained by differences in attentional factors as measured via eye-tracking, or by differences in the recognition of the point-light actions employed. Our findings, therefore, suggest that individuals with HFA are impaired in the use of social information to predict others' actions and provide behavioural evidence that such deficits could be closely related to impairments of predictive coding.

Funder

European Research Council

Max Planck Society

Volkswagen Foundation

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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