Abstract
Altered perception is a key feature of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), yet its precise nature and variability across individuals remain unclear. We developed an online video game, inspired by rodent operant tasks, to assess visual evidence integration. The game employs nonverbal, reward-based training and a pulsed stimulus design for precise control of sensory input, enabling detailed individual-level behavioral analysis. It was playable by typically developing adolescents and their autistic siblings, who spanned the spectrum, including those with profound autism. Game performance correlated with standard ASD survey scores, with ASD participants exhibiting slower learning and altered perceptual integration. Behavioral data were well fit by computational models in which perceptual and learning deficits in ASD arose from increased noise in higher- order visual processing. Our findings reveal that deficits in perceptual integration are widespread across ASD, correlate with symptom severity in social and adaptive domains, and may arise from instability of sensory representations.
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Abstract
Altered perception is a key feature of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), yet its precise nature and variability across individuals remain unclear. We developed an online video game, inspired by rodent operant tasks, to assess visual evidence integration. The game employs nonverbal, reward-based training and a pulsed stimulus design for precise control of sensory input, enabling detailed individual-level behavioral analysis. It was playable by typically developing adolescents and their autistic siblings, who spanned the spectrum, including those with profound autism. Game performance correlated with standard ASD survey scores, with ASD participants exhibiting slower learning and altered perceptual integration. Behavioral data were well fit by computational models in which perceptual and learning deficits in ASD arose from increased noise in higher- order visual processing. Our findings reveal that deficits in perceptual integration are widespread across ASD, correlate with symptom severity in social and adaptive domains, and may arise from instability of sensory representations.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
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