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000016098 1001_ $$0P:(DE-HGF)0$$aSchilbach, L.$$b0
000016098 245__ $$aShall we do this together? Social gaze influences action control in control participants, but not in individuals with high-functioning autism
000016098 260__ $$aLondon [u.a.]$$bSage$$c2012
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000016098 520__ $$aPerceiving someone else's gaze shift toward an object can influence how this object will be manipulated by the observer, suggesting a modulatory effect of a gaze-based social context on action control. High-functioning autism (HFA) is characterized by impairments of social interaction, which may be associated with an inability to automatically integrate socially relevant nonverbal cues when generating actions. To explore these hypotheses, we made use of a stimulus-response compatibility paradigm in which a comparison group and patients with HFA were asked to generate spatially congruent or incongruent motor responses to changes in a face, a face-like and an object stimulus. Results demonstrate that while in the comparison group being looked at by a virtual other leads to a reduction of reaction time costs associated with generating a spatially incongruent response, this effect is not present in the HFA group. We suggest that this modulatory effect of social gaze on action control might play an important role in direct social interactions by helping to coordinate one's actions with those of someone else. Future research should focus on these implicit mechanisms of interpersonal alignment ('online' social cognition), which might be at the very heart of the difficulties individuals with autism experience in everyday social encounters.
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000016098 650_2 $$2MeSH$$aAdult
000016098 650_2 $$2MeSH$$aAutistic Disorder: psychology
000016098 650_2 $$2MeSH$$aCase-Control Studies
000016098 650_2 $$2MeSH$$aFemale
000016098 650_2 $$2MeSH$$aFixation, Ocular
000016098 650_2 $$2MeSH$$aHumans
000016098 650_2 $$2MeSH$$aInterpersonal Relations
000016098 650_2 $$2MeSH$$aMale
000016098 650_2 $$2MeSH$$aNonverbal Communication: psychology
000016098 650_2 $$2MeSH$$aReaction Time
000016098 650_2 $$2MeSH$$aSocial Behavior
000016098 7001_ $$0P:(DE-Juel1)131678$$aEickhoff, S.B.$$b1$$uFZJ
000016098 7001_ $$0P:(DE-Juel1)131855$$aCieslik, E.C.$$b2$$uFZJ
000016098 7001_ $$0P:(DE-Juel1)144165$$aKuzmanovic, B.$$b3
000016098 7001_ $$0P:(DE-Juel1)VDB1715$$aVogeley, K.$$b4$$uFZJ
000016098 773__ $$0PERI:(DE-600)2034686-4$$a10.1177/1362361311409258$$gVol. 16, p. 151 - 162$$p151 - 162$$q16<151 - 162$$tAutism$$v16$$x1362-3613$$y2012
000016098 8567_ $$uhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1362361311409258
000016098 8564_ $$uhttps://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/16098/files/FZJ-16098.pdf$$yPublished under German "Allianz" Licensing conditions on 2011-08-02. Available in OpenAccess from 2012-08-02$$zPublished final document.
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