1. A cross-cultural examination of the two-way mental state attribution in autistic and non-autistic adults
- Author
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Schuster, Bianca, Okamoto, Yuko, Osu, Rieko, Kosaka, Hirotaka, Ide, Masakazu, Cook, Jennifer, Keating, Connor, Takahashi, Toru, and Kurihara, Yuto
- Subjects
Medicine and Health Sciences ,Life Sciences ,Social and Behavioral Sciences - Abstract
Description: Social communication deficits form one of the core symptoms of Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) and comprise difficulties in Theory of Mind (ToM, the capacity to understand other people by ascribing mental states, such as beliefs, desires, or intentions, to them). One task that has extensively been used to measure inter-individual differences in mental state attribution is the so-called animations task, where participants are asked to interpret social situations depicted through the movements of two triangles (e.g., Abell et al., 2000). While traditionally, autistic individuals have been found to provide fewer and/or less appropriate mental state descriptions than controls in this task, more recent research has acknowledged the bi-directionality of these mental state attribution difficulties. In other words, non-autistic people have exhibited difficulties in interpreting depictions of social situations created by autistic people. This recent finding has the potential to fundamentally change the way we look at social interaction difficulties between autistic and non-autistic people: as a two-way process rather than a communication deficit present only in autistic individuals. In the recent years, the idea that social communication difficulties between autistic and non-autistic partners may be bi-directional has gained increasing attention, culminating in theories which frame social isolation among autistic individuals as a consequence of consistent misperceptions by the neurotypical majority (Milton , 2012; Mitchell et al., 2021). Importantly, however, what is deemed as atypical social behaviour is largely culturally dependent (e.g., Triandis , 1988; Murphy , 1976), yet the current understanding of ASD symptomatology and diagnostic standards across the globe is based on research which is highly biased towards western (i.e., WEIRD, Henrich et al., 2010) samples. Western research (i.e., research biased towards an individualist perspective) suggests that kinematic and spatial features of body movement provide informative cues which individuals use to express their own and understand others’ internal states, and that differences in bodily movement may be one of the key contributing factors to suboptimal social interaction between autistic and non-autistic people (Edey et al., 2016; Schuster et al., 2021). At present, little is known to what extent these findings transfer to other (e.g., collectivist) cultures. Indeed, different cultural norms and conventions around bodily expressions are likely to affect what cues individuals use to understand others (Bettinsoli et al., 2021). For instance, while it has been shown that British participants use movement kinematics as one of the primary cues to infer mental states from animations (Schuster et al., 2021), a lower tendency among Japanese individuals to express their internal states in body movements (Aune & Aune, 1996) may indicate that Japanese people rely on cues other than movement kinematics to decode an animation’s identity. By investigating and comparing the communication and understanding of mental states in British and Japanese autistic and non-autistic adults, this study aims to address two primary questions: (a) Do Japanese non-autistic individuals show difficulties when interpreting animations created by Japanese autistic individuals, as has been shown for UK-based participants? (b) Can movement differences between autistic and non-autistic people explain difficulties in interpreting animations in the two cultures to a similar extent? To answer these questions, British and Japanese autistic and non-autistic participants will first be asked to depict various mental states by moving two triangles across a touch-screen device while their finger and hand movements are recorded. Subsequently, all participants will view and interpret animations from all four generator groups. Findings will carry important implications for developing more culturally tailored diagnostic and treatment approaches.
- Published
- 2022
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