2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2017.05.011
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Typical integration of emotion cues from bodies and faces in Autism Spectrum Disorder

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Cited by 21 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Yet, individuals with ASD struggled to align the conceptualizations of their communicative signals with those of their interaction partners when the problem space afforded multiple solutions. This impairment could be isolated because the novel communicative setting prevented access to pre-existing contextual cues that cognitively-able individuals with ASD can capitalize on to resolve ambiguity (Au-Yeung, Kaakinen, Liversedge, & Benson, 2015;Birmingham, Stanley, Nair, & Adolphs, 2015;Branigan, Tosi, & Gillespie-Smith, 2016;Brewer, Biotti, Bird, & Cook, 2017;Hahn, Snedeker, & Rabagliati, 2015;Nadig, Seth, & Sasson, 2015;Pijnacker, Hagoort, Buitelaar, Teunisse, & Geurts, 2009) . Under these experimentally-generated conditions, built to recreate the fleeting ambiguities of everyday interaction, communication requires more than pruning a decision tree of possible signals or iteratively optimizing behavioral outcomes (Botvinick & Weinstein, 2014;Donoso, Collins, & Koechlin, 2014;Keysers & Perrett, 2004) .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet, individuals with ASD struggled to align the conceptualizations of their communicative signals with those of their interaction partners when the problem space afforded multiple solutions. This impairment could be isolated because the novel communicative setting prevented access to pre-existing contextual cues that cognitively-able individuals with ASD can capitalize on to resolve ambiguity (Au-Yeung, Kaakinen, Liversedge, & Benson, 2015;Birmingham, Stanley, Nair, & Adolphs, 2015;Branigan, Tosi, & Gillespie-Smith, 2016;Brewer, Biotti, Bird, & Cook, 2017;Hahn, Snedeker, & Rabagliati, 2015;Nadig, Seth, & Sasson, 2015;Pijnacker, Hagoort, Buitelaar, Teunisse, & Geurts, 2009) . Under these experimentally-generated conditions, built to recreate the fleeting ambiguities of everyday interaction, communication requires more than pruning a decision tree of possible signals or iteratively optimizing behavioral outcomes (Botvinick & Weinstein, 2014;Donoso, Collins, & Koechlin, 2014;Keysers & Perrett, 2004) .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet, individuals with ASD struggled to align the conceptualizations of their communicative signals with those of their interaction partners when the problem space afforded multiple solutions. This impairment could be isolated because the novel communicative setting prevented access to pre-existing contextual cues that cognitively-able individuals with ASD can capitalize on to resolve ambiguity (Au-Yeung, Kaakinen, Liversedge, & Benson, 2015;Birmingham, Stanley, Nair, & Adolphs, 2015;Branigan, Tosi, & Gillespie-Smith, 2016;Brewer, Biotti, Bird, & Cook, 2017;Hahn, Snedeker, & Rabagliati, 2015;Nadig, Seth, & Sasson, 2015;Pijnacker, Hagoort, Buitelaar, Teunisse, & Geurts, 2009) . Under these experimentally-generated conditions, built to recreate the fleeting ambiguities of everyday interaction, communication requires more than pruning a decision tree of possible signals or iteratively optimizing behavioral outcomes (Botvinick & Weinstein, 2014;Donoso, Collins, & Koechlin, 2014;Keysers & Perrett, 2004) .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent work for instance has shown that individuals with high levels of social anxiety looked away from the face when determining emotion, but instead focused on the hands (Kret, Stekelenburg et al 2017). Similarly, Brewer, Biotti et al (2017) showed that individuals with ASD who show a reduced attention to faces could have a greater reliance on bodily cues for emotion recognition. We have also previously shown that children are adult-like in their ability to recognize emotions from the body by approximately 8 years of age (Ross, Polson et al 2012).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%