1 / 27

Hayley Crawford, Joanna Moss, Natasha Elliot, Giles Anderson, Chris Oliver & Joseph McCleery

People or Trains? Visual Preference for Social versus Non-Social Information in Genetic Syndromes and Neurodevelopmental Disorders. Hayley Crawford, Joanna Moss, Natasha Elliot, Giles Anderson, Chris Oliver & Joseph McCleery. Social Information P rocessing.

Télécharger la présentation

Hayley Crawford, Joanna Moss, Natasha Elliot, Giles Anderson, Chris Oliver & Joseph McCleery

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. People or Trains? Visual Preference for Social versus Non-Social Information in Genetic Syndromes and Neurodevelopmental Disorders Hayley Crawford, Joanna Moss, Natasha Elliot, Giles Anderson, Chris Oliver & Joseph McCleery

  2. Social Information Processing • Social development is critically dependent on attending to social stimuli (Dawson et al., 1998) • Differences in attending to social stimuli in people with different social profiles (Riby and Hancock, 2008; 2009)

  3. Social Information Processing • Eye-tracking • How long someone looks at stimuli: information processing • First thing someone looks at: attentional priority • Study 1: ASD • Study 2: Fragile X, Cornelia de Lange, Rubinstein-Taybi syndromes

  4. Social Information Processing in ASD • People with ASD spend less time than TD individuals viewing people and faces in static pictures of social interactions (Kirchner et al., 2010; Riby & Hancock, 2008 & 2009)

  5. Social Information Processing in ASD • Direct side-by-side comparison: • Toddlers with ASD do not allocate as much attention to social stimuli as TD toddlers (Pierce et al., 2011) (Klin et al., 2009) • Some studies show typical looking times, but… • No preference at first fixation (Fletcher-Watson et al., 2009) • Increased time taken to fixate (Freeth et al., 2010) • Static side-by-side photographs

  6. Study 1 • Research Questions: • Do children with ASD spontaneously allocate less attention to naturalistic dynamic social and non-social scenes? • Does the ‘directedness’ of the stimuli affect visual preference? • Two videos were presented side-by-side for 8000ms • One video was social, the other was non-social • The actor/object in both videos were either directed towards, or moved past the participant

  7. Example videos

  8. Participants • Recruited and tested at local special educational needs secondary school

  9. Dwell Time Proportion • No main effect of participant: • No difference in looking time to social or non-social • Main effect of direction: • both groups look more at social directed vs. social non-directed • A priori t-tests: • Participants with ASD look less at social directed than participants with SEN (p = .037) • No difference in social non-directed

  10. Time to Fixate • No main effect of participant: • No difference time taken to fixate on social or non-social • Main effect of direction: • both groups look quicker to social directed vs. social non-directed • A priori t-tests: • No difference in speed to fixate on social directed or non-directed.

  11. Study 1 • Children with ASD look less at social directed stimuli than children with SEN but fixate on the stimuli at the same speed • Research Questions: • Do children with ASD spontaneously allocate less attention to naturalistic dynamic social and non-social scenes? • No • Does the ‘directedness’ of the stimuli affect this? • Yes

  12. Discussion • Similarities in attentional priority, differences in attentional maintenance • Supports previous literature (Pierce et al., 2011; Klin et al., 2009) • Extends previous literature • More natural • Only when social information particularly salient (directed)

  13. Study 2 • Genetic syndromes associated with intellectual disability and unique social profiles

  14. Study 2 • Genetic syndromes associated with intellectual disability and unique social profiles

  15. Study 2 • Genetic syndromes associated with intellectual disability and unique social profiles

  16. Social Information Processing in FXS, CdLS & RTS • Limited literature

  17. Social Information Processing in FXS, CdLS & RTS • Limited literature

  18. Social Information Processing in FXS, CdLS & RTS • Limited literature

  19. Research Questions • Research Questions: • Do children with FXS, RTS and CdLS spontaneously allocate similar attention to naturalistic dynamic social and non-social scenes? • Does the ‘directedness’ of the stimuli affect visual preference? • Same method as Study 1

  20. Participants

  21. Dwell Time • No main effect of participant: • No difference in looking time to social or non-social • Main effect of direction: • All groups look more at social directed vs. social non-directed

  22. Time to Fixate • Significant direction x participant group interaction • Difference in how ‘directedness affects speed to fixate to videos • CdLS fixate to social directed videos slower than FXS & RTS • FXS: fixate on social directed and non-directed at similar speed • CdLS: fixate on social non-directed quicker than directed • RTS: fixate on social directed quicker than non-directed

  23. Summary of results • Participants with FXS: look at social directed and non-directed for same time, fixate at same speed • Participants with CdLS: look at social directed and non-directed for same time, fixate on social non-directed quicker than directed • Participants with RTS: look at social directed and non-directed for same time, fixate on social directed quicker than non-directed • Participants with CdLS take longer to fixate on social directed than both other groups • NB: TD participants

  24. Discussion • Research Questions: • Do children with FXS, RTS and CdLS spontaneously allocate similar attention to naturalistic dynamic social and non-social scenes? • Yes – dwell time • Does the ‘directedness’ of the stimuli affect visual preference? • Yes

  25. Discussion

  26. General Discussion • Coarse measure of dwell time highlighted differences in those with and without typical social development (Study 1) • Nuanced measure of time taken to fixate on stimuli highlighted differences in those with more subtle differences in their social presentation (Study 2) • Previous studies show social processing differences in groups at polar ends of a sociability spectrum (ASD, WS; Riby and colleagues, 2008 & 2009)

  27. Thank you for listening

More Related