Predictive sensorimotor control in autism

Author:

Arthur Tom12,Vine Sam1,Brosnan Mark2,Buckingham Gavin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, EX1 2LU, UK

2. Centre for Applied Autism Research, Department of Psychology, University of Bath, Bath, BA2 7AY, UK

Abstract

Abstract Autism spectrum disorder has been characterized by atypicalities in how predictions and sensory information are processed in the brain. To shed light on this relationship in the context of sensorimotor control, we assessed prediction-related measures of cognition, perception, gaze and motor functioning in a large general population (n = 92; Experiment 1) and in clinically diagnosed autistic participants (n = 29; Experiment 2). In both experiments perception and action were strongly driven by prior expectations of object weight, with large items typically predicted to weigh more than equally-weighted smaller ones. Interestingly, these predictive action models were used comparably at a sensorimotor level in both autistic and neurotypical individuals with varying levels of autistic-like traits. Specifically, initial fingertip force profiles and resulting action kinematics were both scaled according to participants’ pre-lift heaviness estimates, and generic visual sampling behaviours were notably consistent across groups. These results suggest that the weighting of prior information is not chronically underweighted in autism, as proposed by simple Bayesian accounts of the disorder. Instead, our results cautiously implicate context-sensitive processing mechanisms, such as precision modulation and hierarchical volatility inference. Together, these findings present novel implications for both future scientific investigations and the autism community.

Funder

Economic and Social Research Council

South-West Doctoral Training Partnership

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Clinical Neurology

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