» Articles » PMID: 29358377

Heritable Aspects of Biological Motion Perception and Its Covariation with Autistic Traits

Overview
Specialty Science
Date 2018 Jan 24
PMID 29358377
Citations 24
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The ability to detect biological motion (BM) and decipher the meaning therein is essential to human survival and social interaction. However, at the individual level, we are not equally equipped with this ability. In particular, impaired BM perception and abnormal neural responses to BM have been observed in autism spectrum disorder (ASD), a highly heritable neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by devastating social deficits. Here, we examined the underlying sources of individual differences in two abilities fundamental to BM perception (i.e., the abilities to process local kinematic and global configurational information of BM) and explored whether BM perception shares a common genetic origin with autistic traits. Using the classical twin method, we found reliable genetic influences on BM perception and revealed a clear dissociation between its two components-whereas genes account for about 50% of the individual variation in local BM processing, global BM processing is largely shaped by environment. Critically, participants' sensitivity to local BM cues was negatively correlated with their autistic traits through the dimension of social communication, with the covariation largely mediated by shared genetic effects. These findings demonstrate that the ability to process BM, especially with regard to its inherent kinetics, is heritable. They also advance our understanding of the sources of the linkage between autistic symptoms and BM perception deficits, opening up the possibility of treating the ability to process local BM information as a distinct hallmark of social cognition.

Citing Articles

Detecting biological motion signals in human and monkey superior colliculus: a subcortical-cortical pathway for biological motion perception.

Lu X, Hu Z, Xin Y, Yang T, Wang Y, Zhang P Nat Commun. 2024; 15(1):9606.

PMID: 39505906 PMC: 11542025. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-53968-x.


Individual differences and motor planning influence self-recognition of actions.

Kadambi A, Xie Q, Lu H PLoS One. 2024; 19(7):e0303820.

PMID: 39078856 PMC: 11288417. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0303820.


Atypical local and global biological motion perception in children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

Tian J, Yang F, Wang Y, Wang L, Wang N, Jiang Y Elife. 2024; 12.

PMID: 38954462 PMC: 11219041. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.90313.


The domestic chick as an animal model of autism spectrum disorder: building adaptive social perceptions through prenatally formed predispositions.

Matsushima T, Izumi T, Vallortigara G Front Neurosci. 2024; 18:1279947.

PMID: 38356650 PMC: 10864568. DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2024.1279947.


Fetal blockade of nicotinic acetylcholine transmission causes autism-like impairment of biological motion preference in the neonatal chick.

Matsushima T, Miura M, Patzke N, Toji N, Wada K, Ogura Y Cereb Cortex Commun. 2023; 3(4):tgac041.

PMID: 37674673 PMC: 10478028. DOI: 10.1093/texcom/tgac041.


References
1.
Kaiser M, Delmolino L, Tanaka J, Shiffrar M . Comparison of visual sensitivity to human and object motion in autism spectrum disorder. Autism Res. 2010; 3(4):191-5. DOI: 10.1002/aur.137. View

2.
Freitag C, Konrad C, Haberlen M, Kleser C, von Gontard A, Reith W . Perception of biological motion in autism spectrum disorders. Neuropsychologia. 2008; 46(5):1480-94. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2007.12.025. View

3.
Cusack J, Williams J, Neri P . Action perception is intact in autism spectrum disorder. J Neurosci. 2015; 35(5):1849-57. PMC: 4315824. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4133-13.2015. View

4.
Murphy P, Brady N, Fitzgerald M, Troje N . No evidence for impaired perception of biological motion in adults with autistic spectrum disorders. Neuropsychologia. 2009; 47(14):3225-35. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2009.07.026. View

5.
Ikeda H, Blake R, Watanabe K . Eccentric perception of biological motion is unscalably poor. Vision Res. 2005; 45(15):1935-43. DOI: 10.1016/j.visres.2005.02.001. View