Multimodal imaging of the amygdala in non-clinical subjects with high vs. low autistic-like social skills traits.

Psychiatry Res Neuroimaging

Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Philipps Universität Marburg, Marburg, Germany; Center for Mind, Brain and Behavior (CMBB), Marburg, Germany. Electronic address:

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research indicates that impairments in social skills and theory of mind related to autism spectrum disorder (ASD) exist on a continuum among the general population, from typical individuals to those with ASD.
  • This study involved 56 non-clinical participants divided into high and low autistic-like social skill traits, examining amygdala function and structure through various imaging techniques.
  • Results showed that individuals with high social skill traits exhibited increased blood perfusion and different activation patterns in the amygdala when processing fearful faces, suggesting overlapping neurological features between those with typical social functioning and ASD patients.

Article Abstract

Recent clinical and theoretical frameworks suggest that social skills and theory of mind impairments characteristic of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are distributed in the general population on a continuum between healthy individuals and patients. The present multimodal study aimed at investigating the amygdala's function, perfusion, and volume in 56 non-clinical subjects from the general population with high (n = 28 High-SOC) or low (n = 28 Low-SOC) autistic-like social skills traits. Participants underwent magnetic resonance imaging to evaluate the amygdala's functional connectivity at rest, blood perfusion by means of arterial spin labelling, its activation during a face evaluation task and lastly grey matter volumes. The High-SOC group was characterised by higher blood perfusion in both amygdalae, lower volume of the left amygdala and higher activations of the right amygdala during processing of human faces with fearful value. Resting state analyses did not reveal any significant difference between the two groups. Overall, our results highlight the presence of overlapping morpho-functional alterations of the amygdala between healthy individuals and ASD patients confirming the importance of the amygdala in this disorder and in social and emotional processing. Our findings may help disentangle the neurobiological facets of ASD elucidating aetiology and the relationship between clinical symptomatology and neurobiology.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pscychresns.2024.111910DOI Listing

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