Do Autistic Adults Spontaneously Reason About Belief? a Detailed Exploration of Alternative Explanations

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Date

2024

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Volume Title

Publisher

Royal Soc

Open Access Color

GOLD

Green Open Access

Yes

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Abstract

Southgate et al.'s (Southgate 2007 Psychol. Sci. 18, 587-92 (doi:10.1111/j.1467-9280.2007.01944.x)) anticipatory-looking paradigm has presented exciting yet inconclusive evidence surrounding spontaneous mentalizing in autism. The present study aimed to develop this paradigm to address alternative explanations for the lack of predictive eye movements on false-belief tasks by autistic adults. This was achieved through implementing a multi-trial design with matched true-belief conditions, and both high and low inhibitory demand false-belief conditions. We also sought to inspect if any group differences were related to group-specific patterns of attention on key events. Autistic adults were compared with non-autistic adults on this adapted implicit mentalizing task and an established explicit task. The two groups performed equally well in the explicit task; however, autistic adults did not show anticipatory-looking behaviour in the false-belief trials of the implicit task. Critically, both groups showed the same attentional distribution in the implicit task prior to action prediction, indicating that autistic adults process information from social cues in the same way as non-autistic adults, but this information is not then used to update mental representations. Our findings further document that many autistic people struggle to spontaneously mentalize others' beliefs, and this non-verbal paradigm holds promise for use with a wide range of ages and abilities.

Description

White, Sarah J/0000-0001-6946-9155

Keywords

autism, spontaneous mentalizing, eye-tracking, false-belief, eye-tracking, false-belief, Science, Psychology and Cognitive Neuroscience, Q, autism, spontaneous mentalizing

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine, 05 social sciences, 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences

Citation

WoS Q

Q2

Scopus Q

Q1
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Royal Society Open Science

Volume

11

Issue

7

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Scopus : 2

PubMed : 1

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Mendeley Readers : 8

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2

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2

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6

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