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      Looking you in the mouth: abnormal gaze in autism resulting from impaired top-down modulation of visual attention.

      Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
      Adult, Attention, Autistic Disorder, psychology, Eye Movements, Facial Expression, Female, Fixation, Ocular, Humans, Male, Mouth, Psychology, statistics & numerical data, Visual Perception

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          Abstract

          People with autism are impaired in their social behavior, including their eye contact with others, but the processes that underlie this impairment remain elusive. We combined high-resolution eye tracking with computational modeling in a group of 10 high-functioning individuals with autism to address this issue. The group fixated the location of the mouth in facial expressions more than did matched controls, even when the mouth was not shown, even in faces that were inverted and most noticeably at latencies of 200-400 ms. Comparisons with a computational model of visual saliency argue that the abnormal bias for fixating the mouth in autism is not driven by an exaggerated sensitivity to the bottom-up saliency of the features, but rather by an abnormal top-down strategy for allocating visual attention.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          18985106
          2555425
          10.1093/scan/nsl030

          Chemistry
          Adult,Attention,Autistic Disorder,psychology,Eye Movements,Facial Expression,Female,Fixation, Ocular,Humans,Male,Mouth,Psychology,statistics & numerical data,Visual Perception

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