학술논문

Aberrant Face and Gaze Habituation in Fragile X Syndrome.
Document Type
Article
Source
American Journal of Psychiatry. Oct2014, Vol. 171 Issue 10, p1099-1106. 8p.
Subject
*FRAGILE X syndrome
*INTELLECTUAL disabilities
*HABITUATION (Neuropsychology)
*CONDITIONED response
*FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging
*ANXIETY
*PSYCHIATRY
Language
ISSN
0002-953X
Abstract
Objective: The authors sought to investigate neural system habituation to face and eye gaze in fragile X syndrome, a disorder characterized by eye-gaze aversion, among other social and cognitive deficits. Method: Participants (ages 15-25 years) were 30 individuals with fragile X syndrome (females, N=14) and a comparison group of 25 individuals without fragile X syndrome (females, N=12) matched for general cognitive ability and autism symptoms. Functional MRI (fMRI) was used to assess brain activation during a gaze habituation task. Participants viewed repeated presentations of four unique faces with either direct or averted eye gaze and judged the direction of eye gaze. Results: Four participants (males, N=4/4; fragile X syndrome, N=3) were excluded because of excessive head motion during fMRI scanning. Behavioral performance did not differ between the groups. Less neural habituation (and significant sensitization) in the fragile X syndrome group was found in the cingulate gyrus, fusiform gyrus, and frontal cortex in response to all faces (direct and averted gaze). Left fusiform habituation in female participants was directly correlated with higher, more typical levels of the fragile X mental retardation protein and inversely correlated with autism symptoms. There was no evidence for differential habituation to direct gaze compared with averted gaze within or between groups. Conclusions: Impaired habituation and accentuated sensitization in response to face/eye gaze was distributed across multiple levels of neural processing. These results could help inform interventions, such as desensitization therapy, which may help patients with fragile X syndrome modulate anxiety and arousal associated with eye gaze, thereby improving social functioning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]