AI Article Synopsis

  • This study looked at how autistic people feel and understand emotions compared to others using a special test called the Multifaceted Empathy Test for juveniles (MET-J).
  • Researchers tested 184 participants of different ages to see how emotions affect empathy, finding that autistic individuals showed some differences in how they reacted to happy and sad faces.
  • The results suggest that autistic people may struggle a bit more with understanding emotions, which could make social interactions harder for them, and this information could help improve social support and tools for those with autism.

Article Abstract

Although empathy impairments have been reported in autistic individuals, there is no clear consensus on how emotional valence influences this multidimensional process. In this study, we use the Multifaceted Empathy Test for juveniles (MET-J) to interrogate emotional and cognitive empathy in 184 participants (ages 8-59 years, 83 autistic) under the robust Bayesian inference framework. Group comparisons demonstrate previously unreported interaction effects between: (1) valence and autism diagnosis in predictions of emotional resonance, and (2) valence and age group in predictions of arousal to images portraying positive and negative facial expressions. These results extend previous studies using the MET by examining differential effects of emotional valence in a large sample of autistic children and adults with average or above-average intelligence. We report impaired cognitive empathy in autism, and subtle differences in emotional empathy characterized by less distinction between emotional resonance to positive vs. negative facial expressions in autism compared to neurotypicals. Reduced emotional differentiation between positive and negative affect in others could be a mechanism for diminished social reciprocity that poses a universal challenge for people with autism. These component- and valence- specific findings are of clinical relevance for the development and implementation of target-specific social interventions in autism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8484273PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-98516-5DOI Listing

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