Recognition of own- and other-race faces in autism spectrum disorders

Date

Authors

Wilson, C.Ellie
Palermo, Romina
Burton, A. Mike
Brock, John

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Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Group

Abstract

Empirical data regarding the extent of face recognition abnormalities in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is inconsistent. Here, 27 ASD and 47 typically developing (TD) children completed an immediate two-alternative forced-choice identity matching task. We contrasted recognition of own- and otherrace faces, and, counter to prediction, we found a typical advantage for recognizing own- over other-race faces in both the ASD and TD groups. In addition, ASD and TD groups responded similarly to stimulus manipulations (use of identical or different photographs for identity matching and cropping stimuli to remove hair information). However, age-standardized scores varied widely within the ASD sample, and a subgroup of ASD participants with impaired face recognition did not exhibit a significant ownrace recognition advantage. An explanation regarding early experience with faces is considered, and implications for research of individual variation within ASD are discussed.

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Citation

Source

The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology

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Restricted until

2037-12-31