Atypical Impact of Action Effect Delay on Motor Performance in Autism.

J Autism Dev Disord

Special Population Advance Research and Clinical Center (SPARC), University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.

Published: February 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Atypical sensory perception and motor impairments are key aspects of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) that predict social and non-social challenges, but their connection is not well understood.
  • Researchers conducted a study comparing individuals with ASD and typically developed (TD) participants using a speeded reaction-time task to explore how sensory-motor coupling influences motor response.
  • The results indicated that while both groups experienced facilitation from immediate action effects on response selection, the ASD group did not show the same sensitivity to delays in the action effect, suggesting that altered sensory perception may contribute to atypical motor performance in ASD.

Article Abstract

Atypical sensory perception and motor impairments are primary features of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) that indicate atypical development and predict social and non-social challenges. However, their link is poorly understood. Sensory perception is often integrated with motor processes when a sensory effect is temporally contiguous with the motor response. Such sensory-motor coupling further improves motor behavior. Previous studies indicate alterations in sensory perception of action-effect temporal contiguity in ASD, which bares the question of how it may impact motor performance. People diagnosed with ASD and typically developed (TD) participants performed a speeded reaction-time task previously established to capture the facilitating impact of action's perceptual effect on motor response selection. The sensitivity of this mechanism to delays in the effect was measured, manipulating the action-effect temporal contiguity in a within-subject design. An immediate action effect (compared to a No-effect condition) facilitated response selection in the TD group. This facilitation effect was evident in the ASD group but did not show the typical sensitivity to the effect delay. While in the TD group, RT was shorter in the short (225ms) compared to the long (675ms) action effect delay condition, this distinguished pattern was absent in the ASD group. The findings provide supporting evidence that atypical motor performance in ASD results, at least in part, from an altered sensory perception of action effect temporal contiguity. We discuss the results in light of the reduced perceptual specialization account in ASD and its potential for undermining adaptive sensorimotor processes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10803-023-06227-9DOI Listing

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