» Articles » PMID: 12215080

Visual Fixation Patterns During Viewing of Naturalistic Social Situations As Predictors of Social Competence in Individuals with Autism

Overview
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2002 Sep 7
PMID 12215080
Citations 714
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Manifestations of core social deficits in autism are more pronounced in everyday settings than in explicit experimental tasks. To bring experimental measures in line with clinical observation, we report a novel method of quantifying atypical strategies of social monitoring in a setting that simulates the demands of daily experience. Enhanced ecological validity was intended to maximize between-group effect sizes and assess the predictive utility of experimental variables relative to outcome measures of social competence.

Methods: While viewing social scenes, eye-tracking technology measured visual fixations in 15 cognitively able males with autism and 15 age-, sex-, and verbal IQ-matched control subjects. We reliably coded fixations on 4 regions: mouth, eyes, body, and objects. Statistical analyses compared fixation time on regions of interest between groups and correlation of fixation time with outcome measures of social competence (ie, standardized measures of daily social adjustment and degree of autistic social symptoms).

Results: Significant between-group differences were obtained for all 4 regions. The best predictor of autism was reduced eye region fixation time. Fixation on mouths and objects was significantly correlated with social functioning: increased focus on mouths predicted improved social adjustment and less autistic social impairment, whereas more time on objects predicted the opposite relationship.

Conclusions: When viewing naturalistic social situations, individuals with autism demonstrate abnormal patterns of social visual pursuit consistent with reduced salience of eyes and increased salience of mouths, bodies, and objects. Fixation times on mouths and objects but not on eyes are strong predictors of degree of social competence.

Citing Articles

Using the Listening2Faces App with Three Young Adults with Autism: A Feasibility Study.

Baron A, Harwood V, Woodard C, Anderson K, Fernandes B, Sullivan J Adv Neurodev Disord. 2025; 9(1):51-63.

PMID: 39963099 PMC: 11829926. DOI: 10.1007/s41252-023-00390-x.


Neural correlates of facial recognition deficits in autism spectrum disorder: a comprehensive review.

Liu J, Chen H, Wang H, Wang Z Front Psychiatry. 2025; 15():1464142.

PMID: 39834575 PMC: 11743606. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1464142.


Enhancing Autism Detection Through Gaze Analysis Using Eye Tracking Sensors and Data Attribution with Distillation in Deep Neural Networks.

Colonnese F, Di Luzio F, Rosato A, Panella M Sensors (Basel). 2024; 24(23).

PMID: 39686328 PMC: 11645092. DOI: 10.3390/s24237792.


The fundamentals of eye tracking part 1: The link between theory and research question.

Hessels R, Nuthmann A, Nystrom M, Andersson R, Niehorster D, Hooge I Behav Res Methods. 2024; 57(1):16.

PMID: 39668288 PMC: 11638287. DOI: 10.3758/s13428-024-02544-8.


Social attention in the wild - fixations to the eyes and autistic traits during a naturalistic interaction in a healthy sample.

Buehler R, Ansorge U, Silani G Sci Rep. 2024; 14(1):30102.

PMID: 39627271 PMC: 11615244. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-79210-8.