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Contextual priors do not modulate action prediction in children with autism
Author(s) -
Lucía Amoruso,
Antonio Narzisi,
Martina Pinzino,
Alessandra Finisguerra,
Lucia Billeci,
Sara Calderoni,
Franco Fabbro,
Filippo Muratori,
Anna Volzone,
Cosimo Urgesi
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society b biological sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.342
H-Index - 253
eISSN - 1471-2954
pISSN - 0962-8452
DOI - 10.1098/rspb.2019.1319
Subject(s) - prior probability , autism , action (physics) , context (archaeology) , psychology , cognitive psychology , bayesian probability , probabilistic logic , perception , developmental psychology , computer science , artificial intelligence , neuroscience , geography , physics , archaeology , quantum mechanics
Bayesian accounts of autism suggest that this disorder may be rooted in an impaired ability to estimate the probability of future events, possibly owing to reduced priors. Here, we tested this hypothesis within the action domain in children with and without autism using a behavioural paradigm comprising a familiarization and a testing phase. During familiarization, children observed videos depicting a child model performing actions in diverse contexts. Crucially, within this phase, we implicitly biased action-context associations in terms of their probability of co-occurrence. During testing, children observed the same videos but drastically shortened (i.e. reduced amount of kinematics information) and were asked to infer action unfolding. Since during the testing phase movement kinematics became ambiguous, we expected children's responses to be biased to contextual priors, thus compensating for perceptual uncertainty. While this probabilistic effect was present in controls, no such modulation was observed in autistic children, overall suggesting an impairment in using contextual priors when predicting other peoples' actions in uncertain environments.

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