학술논문

Unique deficit in embodied simulation in autism: An fMRI study comparing autism and developmental coordination disorder
Document Type
Report
Source
Human Brain Mapping. December 15, 2020, Vol. 42 Issue 5, p1532, 15 p.
Subject
Apraxia
Autism
Medical research
Magnetic resonance imaging
Medicine, Experimental
Language
English
ISSN
1065-9471
Abstract
INTRODUCTION One way of understanding other people's actions and intentions is to implicitly map other's actions onto one's own motor representations, and pre‐cognitively “simulate” others from an embodied first‐person perspective [...]
: A deficit in pre‐cognitively mirroring other people's actions and experiences may be related to the social impairments observed in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). However, it is unclear whether such embodied simulation deficits are unique to ASD or instead are related to motor impairment, which is commonly comorbid with ASD. Here we aim to disentangle how, neurologically, motor impairments contribute to simulation deficits and identify unique neural signatures of ASD. We compare children with ASD (N = 30) to children with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD; N = 23) as well as a typically developing group (N = 33) during fMRI tasks in which children observe, imitate, and mentalize about other people's actions. Results indicate a unique neural signature in ASD: during action observation, only the ASD group shows hypoactivity in a region important for simulation (inferior frontal gyrus, pars opercularis, IFGop). However, during a motor production task (imitation), the IFGop is hypoactive for both ASD and DCD groups. For all tasks, we find correlations across groups with motor ability, even after controlling for age, IQ, and social impairment. Conversely, across groups, mentalizing ability is correlated with activity in the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex when controlling for motor ability. These findings help identify the unique neurobiological basis of ASD for aspects of social processing. Furthermore, as no previous fMRI studies correlated brain activity with motor impairment in ASD, these findings help explain prior conflicting reports in these simulation networks.