Publications by authors named "Katie Lh Gray"

Research has shown that some autistic people have severe difficulties in recognising other people's faces. However, little is understood about how these difficulties impact the daily life and the mental well-being of autistic people. In this study, we asked 60 autistic adults with varying degrees of face recognition ability to complete two tests of face recognition, a questionnaire about social anxiety and a bespoke survey which asked participants about their experiences of face recognition and social interaction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Recent research highlights that people interact differently based on their spatial arrangement, with face-to-face pairs thought to use a specific form of visual processing similar to how we view faces.
  • It was hypothesized that this configural processing would lead to better sensitivity in detecting social cues in upright, face-to-face dyads compared to other orientations like back-to-back or upside-down.
  • However, experiments showed no significant difference in sensitivity to social distance in any arrangement, indicating that the processing for upright dyads may not align with the enhanced processing seen in upright faces.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It is often assumed that the recognition of facial expressions is impaired in autism. However, recent evidence suggests that reports of expression recognition difficulties in autistic participants may be attributable to co-occurring alexithymia-a trait associated with difficulties interpreting interoceptive and emotional states-not autism per se. Due to problems fixating on the eye-region, autistic individuals may be more reliant on information from the mouth region when judging facial expressions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In change detection paradigms, changes to social or animate aspects of a scene are detected better and faster compared with non-social or inanimate aspects. While previous studies have focused on how changes to individual faces/bodies are detected, it is possible that individuals presented within a social interaction may be further prioritised, as the accurate interpretation of social interactions may convey a competitive advantage. Over three experiments, we explored change detection to complex real-world scenes, in which changes either occurred by the removal of (a) an individual on their own, (b) an individual who was interacting with others, or (c) an object.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF