The article reports that children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder struggle to process whole, intact faces, which affects automatic social attention during interactions. It explores how processing of face context, not just eye movements, differs in ADHD and how upside-down faces help reveal the underlying mechanisms. The findings shed light on specific social processing challenges and potential classroom support considerations.

This topic is of interest to psychology readers because it links automatic attentional processes, face perception, and social interaction, illustrating how perceptual and cognitive systems interact in developmental conditions.

Article Title: Children with attention disorders struggle to process whole faces during social interactions

Link to PsyPost Article: https://www.psypost dot org/children-with-attention-disorders-struggle-to-process-whole-faces-during-social-interactions/

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#Attention #FaceProcessing #ADHD #SocialCognition #PsyPost

5. The experimental conditions (inside an MRI scanner) were perhaps less than optimal for many of the participants, especially the Autistic group, I would imagine!

Participants were presented with a selection of different (supposedly) emotional stimuli in one of two conditions: with and without a red cross superimposed between the actor’s eyes

The experimental design was more sophisticated than that suggests, but the red cross was used to encourage fixation within the region of the actor’s eyes, i.e. to force eye contact

The experimenters found that for three of the subcortical regions associated with face processing (superior colliculus, and left and right amygdalae), there was no significant difference in activation between the Autistic and control groups in ‘free viewing’

When the cross was present (‘constrained viewing’) there was a significant difference with a large effect size for these three regions

The fourth region, the pulvinar, had significantly different activation between Autistic and control groups across the board, except in constrained viewing in the ‘angry’ case

Figure 1, showing these differences: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-03378-5/figures/1

#ActuallyAutistic #MRIScanner #MagneticResonanceImaging #fMRI #EyeFixation #FaceProcessing

Figure 1 | Scientific Reports

Noah Sasson: Connecting with the autistic community | Spectrum | Autism Research News

Intentional interactions with autistic people led Sasson to refocus his research.

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This week, we’re bringing you some labors of love: a thread lamenting the autism field’s focus on gene lists, a study introducing genetic diversity in mouse models, and long-awaited results from a biomarker study.

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Brain’s response to faces foretells social development in autistic people | Spectrum | Autism Research News

A delayed brain response to viewing faces may predict lags in social-skill development in autistic people.

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Connecting autism-linked genetic variation to infant social behavior | Spectrum | Autism Research News

Integrating genetic analyses into studies of babies’ brain development could help us understand how autism-related genes contribute to autism traits.

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Alexithymia, not autism, may drive eye-gaze patterns | Spectrum | Autism Research News

How autistic people look at a face may be linked more to alexithymia, a condition marked by difficulties recognizing one's own emotions, than to autism.

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