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Visual Preference for Biological Motion in Children and Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder: An Eye-Tracking Study

Authors :
Seth Ness
Robert L. Hendren
Bennett L. Leventhal
Matthew Boice
Matthew S. Goodwin
Andrew Skalkin
Frederick Shic
Abigail Bangerter
Gahan Pandina
Dzmitry A. Kaliukhovich
Nikolay V. Manyakov
Geraldine Dawson
Source :
Journal of autism and developmental disorders, vol 51, iss 7, Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2021.

Abstract

Participants with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) (n = 121, mean [SD] age: 14.6 [8.0] years) and typically developing (TD) controls (n = 40, 16.4 [13.3] years) were presented with a series of videos representing biological motion on one side of a computer monitor screen and non-biological motion on the other, while their eye movements were recorded. As predicted, participants with ASD spent less overall time looking at presented stimuli than TD participants (P –3) and showed less preference for biological motion (P –5). Participants with ASD also had greater average latencies than TD participants of the first fixation on both biological (P P

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of autism and developmental disorders, vol 51, iss 7, Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eb5baca038bdbc420a1c574c679aa3ab