Repeated viewing of a stimulus causes a change in perceptual sensitivity, known as a visual aftereffect. Similarly, in neuroimaging, repetitions of the same stimulus result in a reduction in the neural response, known as repetition suppression (RS). Previous research shows that aftereffects for faces are reduced in both children with autism and in first-degree relatives. With functional magnetic resonance imaging, we found that the magnitude of RS to faces in neurotypical participants was negatively correlated with individual differences in autistic traits. We replicated this finding in a second experiment, while additional experiments showed that autistic traits also negatively predicted RS to images of scenes and simple geometric shapes. ...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
AbstractI review a number of fMRI studies that investigate the effects of repeating faces on respons...
International audienceIntroduction:Human visual perception is thought to be coarse-to-fine, with ear...
Autism spectrum conditions (ASC) are associated with a number of atypicalities in face processing, i...
There is substantial variation in the magnitude of the repetition suppression (RS) effects across in...
AbstractThere is substantial variation in the magnitude of the repetition suppression (RS) effects a...
Contains fulltext : 195734.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Recent theore...
Item does not contain fulltextRecent theoretical frameworks have hypothesized that autism spectrum d...
This study aimed to determine why face identity aftereffects are diminished in children with autism,...
This study aimed to determine why face identity aftereffects are diminished in children with autism,...
Single-unit recordings and functional brain imaging studies have shown reduced neural responses to r...
Face identity aftereffects are significantly diminished in children with autism relative to typical ...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies dealing with Autistic children have primarily b...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
AbstractI review a number of fMRI studies that investigate the effects of repeating faces on respons...
International audienceIntroduction:Human visual perception is thought to be coarse-to-fine, with ear...
Autism spectrum conditions (ASC) are associated with a number of atypicalities in face processing, i...
There is substantial variation in the magnitude of the repetition suppression (RS) effects across in...
AbstractThere is substantial variation in the magnitude of the repetition suppression (RS) effects a...
Contains fulltext : 195734.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Recent theore...
Item does not contain fulltextRecent theoretical frameworks have hypothesized that autism spectrum d...
This study aimed to determine why face identity aftereffects are diminished in children with autism,...
This study aimed to determine why face identity aftereffects are diminished in children with autism,...
Single-unit recordings and functional brain imaging studies have shown reduced neural responses to r...
Face identity aftereffects are significantly diminished in children with autism relative to typical ...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies dealing with Autistic children have primarily b...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
AbstractI review a number of fMRI studies that investigate the effects of repeating faces on respons...
International audienceIntroduction:Human visual perception is thought to be coarse-to-fine, with ear...