Abstract
hen different images are presented to the eyes, the brain is faced with ambiguity, causing perceptual bistability:
visual perception continuously alternates between the monocular images, a phenomenon called binocular rivalry.
Many models of rivalry suggest that its temporal dynamics depend on mutual inhibition among neurons representing
competing images. These models predict that rivalry should be different in autism, which has been proposed to
present an atypical ratio of excitation and inhibition [the E/I imbalance hypothesis; Rubenstein & Merzenich, 2003].
In line with this prediction, some recent studies have provided evidence for atypical binocular rivalry dynamics in
autistic adults. In this study, we examined if these findings generalize to autistic children. We developed a childfriendly
binocular rivalry paradigm, which included two types of stimuli, low- and high-complexity, and compared
rivalry dynamics in groups of autistic and age- and intellectual ability-matched typical children. Unexpectedly, the
two groups of children presented the same number of perceptual transitions and the same mean phase durations
(times perceiving one of the two stimuli). Yet autistic children reported mixed percepts for a shorter proportion of
time (a difference which was in the opposite direction to previous adult studies), while elevated autistic symptomatology
was associated with shorter mixed perception periods. Rivalry in the two groups was affected similarly by stimulus
type, and consistent with previous findings. Our results suggest that rivalry dynamics are differentially affected in
adults and developing autistic children and could be accounted for by hierarchical models of binocular rivalry,
including both inhibition and top-down influences.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1096-1106 |
Journal | Autism Research |
Volume | 10 |
Issue number | 6 |
Early online date | 16 Mar 2017 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 16 Mar 2017 |
Keywords
- binocular rivalry
- autism
- perception
- bistable perception
- vision
- atypical development