Article

Exploring face perception in disorders of development: evidence from Williams syndrome and autism

Details

Citation

Riby D, Doherty-Sneddon G & Bruce V (2008) Exploring face perception in disorders of development: evidence from Williams syndrome and autism. Journal of Neuropsychology, 2 (1), pp. 47-64. https://doi.org/10.1348/174866407X255690

Abstract
Individuals with Williams syndrome (WS) and autism are characterised by different social phenotypes but have been said to show similar atypicalities of face processing style. Although the structural encoding of faces may be similarly atypical in these two developmental disorders, there are clear differences in overall face skills. The inclusion of both populations in the same study can address how the profile of face skills varies across disorders. The current paper explored the processing of identity, eye gaze, lip reading and expressions of emotion using the same participants across face domains. The tasks had previously been used to make claims of a modular structure to face perception in typical development. Participants with WS (n=15) and autism (n=20) could be dissociated from each other, and from individuals with general developmental delay, in the domains of eye gaze and expression processing. Individuals with WS were stronger at these skills than individuals with autism. Even if the structural encoding of faces appears similarly atypical in these groups, the overall profile of face skills, as well as the underlying architecture of face perception, varies greatly. The research provides insights into typical and atypical models of face perception in WS and autism.

Keywords
Autism; Williams syndrome; Face perception; Face perception; Autism; Williams Syndrome; Gaze (Psychology)

Journal
Journal of Neuropsychology: Volume 2, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date31/03/2008
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/388
PublisherThe British Psychological Society
ISSN1748-6645