Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/16949
Title: Perceptual similarity in autism
Authors: Bott, Lewis
Brock, Jon
Brockdorff, Noellie
Boucher, Jill
Lamberts, Koen
Keywords: Autism
Autism in adolescence
Autism spectrum disorders
Autism -- Imaging
Autism -- Psychological aspects
Visual perception -- Experiments
Space perception
Issue Date: 2006
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Group
Citation: Bott, L., Brock, J., Brockdorff, N., Boucher, J., & Lamberts, K. (2006). Perceptual similarity in autism. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 59(0), 1-18.
Abstract: People with autism have consistently been found to outperform controls on visuo-spatial tasks such as block design, embedded figures, and visual search tasks. Plaisted, O’Riordan, and others (Bonnel et al., 2003; O’Riordan & Plaisted, 2001; O’Riordan, Plaisted, Driver, & Baron-Cohen, 2001; Plaisted, O’Riordan, & Baron-Cohen, 1998a, 1998b) have suggested that these findings might be explained in terms of reduced perceptual similarity in autism, and that reduced perceptual similarity could also account for the difficulties that people with autism have in making generalizations to novel situations. In this study, high-functioning adults with autism and ability-matched controls performed a low-level categorization task designed to examine perceptual similarity. Results were analysed using standard statistical techniques and modeled using a quantitative model of categorization. This analysis revealed that participants with autism required reliably longer to learn the category structure than did the control group but, contrary to the predictions of the reduced perceptual similarity hypothesis, no evidence was found of more accurate performance by the participants with autism during the generalization stage. Our results suggest that when all participants are attending to the same attributes of an object in the visual domain, people with autism will not display signs of enhanced perceptual similarity.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/16949
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