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Deficit in visual temporal integration in autism spectrum disorders
Authors:Tamami Nakano  Haruhisa Ota  Nobumasa Kato  Shigeru Kitazawa
Institution:1.Department of Physiology, Juntendo University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan;2.Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology (CREST), Japan Science and Technology Agency, Saitama, Japan;3.Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Tokyo, Japan;4.Department of Psychiatry, Showa University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract:Individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are superior in processing local features. Frith and Happe conceptualize this cognitive bias as ‘weak central coherence’, implying that a local enhancement derives from a weakness in integrating local elements into a coherent whole. The suggested deficit has been challenged, however, because individuals with ASD were not found to be inferior to normal controls in holistic perception. In these opposing studies, however, subjects were encouraged to ignore local features and attend to the whole. Therefore, no one has directly tested whether individuals with ASD are able to integrate local elements over time into a whole image. Here, we report a weakness of individuals with ASD in naming familiar objects moved behind a narrow slit, which was worsened by the absence of local salient features. The results indicate that individuals with ASD have a clear deficit in integrating local visual information over time into a global whole, providing direct evidence for the weak central coherence hypothesis.
Keywords:autism  slit viewing  weak central coherence
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