自我偏见和自我相关的心理化在青少年自闭症中没有改变。

IF 3.2 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders Pub Date : 2025-01-17 DOI:10.1007/s10803-024-06705-8
Letizia Amodeo, Annabel D Nijhof, David M Williams, Jan R Wiersema
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:自我是一个多维概念,可以在前反思(一阶)层面,在更深的反思层面(二阶),甚至在元层面(代表自己的想法,即与自我相关的心理化)上表现出来。由于自我相关加工和心智化对社会认知至关重要,这两种构念都在经历持续社会交际困难的自闭症患者中进行了研究。一些研究表明,自闭症相关的自我偏见减少,即倾向于优先处理与自我相关的内容;而另一些人则观察到自闭症患者对自己想法的思维能力下降。然而,先前的研究在单独研究的背景下,在孤立的情况下检查了不同水平的自我相关加工。方法:在本研究中,我们直接比较了患有自闭症和非自闭症青少年的自我偏见、自我和他人相关的心理化,以确定在这种情况下哪些因素发生了改变。30名自闭症青少年和26名年龄和智商匹配的对照组进行了视觉搜索任务(一阶自我偏见)、特征形容词任务(二阶自我偏见)、认知感觉任务(自我相关的心理化)和快乐动画任务(他人相关的心理化)。父母还完成了两份问卷(即SRS, SCQ)来评估青少年的自闭症特征程度。结果:我们的发现重复了先前的研究,表明自闭症患者的其他相关精神化减少。然而,我们没有发现有自闭症的青少年和没有自闭症的青少年在一级或二级自我偏见方面有任何差异,也没有发现他们对自己的想法进行心理化的能力有任何差异。结论:与最近的调查一致,我们的结果不支持早期关于自闭症患者自我相关信息加工改变的说法。
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Self-Bias and Self-Related Mentalizing are Unaltered in Adolescents with Autism.

Purpose: The self is a multidimensional concept that can be represented at a pre-reflective (first-order) level, at a deeper, reflective level (second-order), or even at a meta-level (representing one's own thoughts, i.e. self-related mentalizing). Since self-related processing and mentalizing are crucial for social cognition, both constructs have been researched in individuals with autism, who experience persistent socio-communicative difficulties. Some studies suggested autism-related reductions of the self-bias, i.e. tendency to preferentially process self-related content; while others observed a decreased ability to mentalize on one's own thoughts in autism. However, prior research examined distinct levels of self-related processing in isolation, in the context of separate studies.

Methods: In this investigation, we directly compared self-bias, self- and other-related mentalizing within the same sample of adolescents with and without autism, to identify which of these are altered in this condition. Thirty adolescents with autism and 26 age- and IQ-matched controls performed a visual search task (first-order self-bias), a trait adjectives task (second-order self-bias), a feeling-of-knowing task (self-related mentalizing) and the Frith-Happé animations task (other-related mentalizing). Parents also completed two questionnaires (i.e. SRS, SCQ) assessing the adolescent's degree of autism traits.

Results: Our findings replicated previous research showing reduced other-related mentalizing in autism. However, we did not find any difference between adolescents with and without autism in terms of first- or second-order self-bias, nor in the ability to mentalize on one's own thoughts.

Conclusion: In line with recent investigations, our results do not support earlier claims of altered self-related information processing in autism.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
10.30%
发文量
433
期刊介绍: The Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders seeks to advance theoretical and applied research as well as examine and evaluate clinical diagnoses and treatments for autism and related disabilities. JADD encourages research submissions on the causes of ASDs and related disorders, including genetic, immunological, and environmental factors; diagnosis and assessment tools (e.g., for early detection as well as behavioral and communications characteristics); and prevention and treatment options. Sample topics include: Social responsiveness in young children with autism Advances in diagnosing and reporting autism Omega-3 fatty acids to treat autism symptoms Parental and child adherence to behavioral and medical treatments for autism Increasing independent task completion by students with autism spectrum disorder Does laughter differ in children with autism? Predicting ASD diagnosis and social impairment in younger siblings of children with autism The effects of psychotropic and nonpsychotropic medication with adolescents and adults with ASD Increasing independence for individuals with ASDs Group interventions to promote social skills in school-aged children with ASDs Standard diagnostic measures for ASDs Substance abuse in adults with autism Differentiating between ADHD and autism symptoms Social competence and social skills training and interventions for children with ASDs Therapeutic horseback riding and social functioning in children with autism Authors and readers of the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders include sch olars, researchers, professionals, policy makers, and graduate students from a broad range of cross-disciplines, including developmental, clinical child, and school psychology; pediatrics; psychiatry; education; social work and counseling; speech, communication, and physical therapy; medicine and neuroscience; and public health.
期刊最新文献
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