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Infant viewing of social scenes is under genetic control and atypical in autism
Long before infants reach, crawl, or walk, they explore the world by looking: they look to learn and to engage(1), giving preferential attention to social stimuli including faces(2), face-like stimuli(3), and biological motion(4). This capacity—social visual engagement—shapes typical infant developm...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
2017
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5842695/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28700580 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature22999 |
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author | Constantino, John N. Kennon-McGill, Stefanie Weichselbaum, Claire Marrus, Natasha Haider, Alyzeh Glowinski, Anne L. Gillespie, Scott Klaiman, Cheryl Klin, Ami Jones, Warren |
author_facet | Constantino, John N. Kennon-McGill, Stefanie Weichselbaum, Claire Marrus, Natasha Haider, Alyzeh Glowinski, Anne L. Gillespie, Scott Klaiman, Cheryl Klin, Ami Jones, Warren |
author_sort | Constantino, John N. |
collection | PubMed |
description | Long before infants reach, crawl, or walk, they explore the world by looking: they look to learn and to engage(1), giving preferential attention to social stimuli including faces(2), face-like stimuli(3), and biological motion(4). This capacity—social visual engagement—shapes typical infant development from birth(5) and is pathognomonically impaired in children affected by autism(6). Here we show that variation in viewing of social scenes—including levels of preferential attention and the timing, direction, and targeting of individual eye movements—is strongly influenced by genetic factors, with effects directly traceable to the active seeking of social information(7). In a series of eye-tracking experiments conducted with 338 toddlers—including 166 epidemiologically-ascertained twins, 88 non-twins with autism, and 84 singleton controls—we find high monozygotic twin-twin concordance (0.91) and relatively low dizygotic concordance (0.35). Moreover, the measures that are most highly heritable, preferential attention to eye and mouth regions of the face, are also those that are differentially diminished in children with autism (Χ(2)=64.03, P<0.0001). These results—which implicate social visual engagement as a neurodevelopmental endophenotype—not only for autism, but for population-wide variation in social-information-seeking(8)—reveal a means of human biological niche construction, with phenotypic differences emerging from the interaction of individual genotypes with early life experience(7). |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-5842695 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2017 |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-58426952018-03-08 Infant viewing of social scenes is under genetic control and atypical in autism Constantino, John N. Kennon-McGill, Stefanie Weichselbaum, Claire Marrus, Natasha Haider, Alyzeh Glowinski, Anne L. Gillespie, Scott Klaiman, Cheryl Klin, Ami Jones, Warren Nature Article Long before infants reach, crawl, or walk, they explore the world by looking: they look to learn and to engage(1), giving preferential attention to social stimuli including faces(2), face-like stimuli(3), and biological motion(4). This capacity—social visual engagement—shapes typical infant development from birth(5) and is pathognomonically impaired in children affected by autism(6). Here we show that variation in viewing of social scenes—including levels of preferential attention and the timing, direction, and targeting of individual eye movements—is strongly influenced by genetic factors, with effects directly traceable to the active seeking of social information(7). In a series of eye-tracking experiments conducted with 338 toddlers—including 166 epidemiologically-ascertained twins, 88 non-twins with autism, and 84 singleton controls—we find high monozygotic twin-twin concordance (0.91) and relatively low dizygotic concordance (0.35). Moreover, the measures that are most highly heritable, preferential attention to eye and mouth regions of the face, are also those that are differentially diminished in children with autism (Χ(2)=64.03, P<0.0001). These results—which implicate social visual engagement as a neurodevelopmental endophenotype—not only for autism, but for population-wide variation in social-information-seeking(8)—reveal a means of human biological niche construction, with phenotypic differences emerging from the interaction of individual genotypes with early life experience(7). 2017-07-12 2017-07-20 /pmc/articles/PMC5842695/ /pubmed/28700580 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature22999 Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms Reprints and permissions information is available at www.nature.com/reprints (http://www.nature.com/reprints) . |
spellingShingle | Article Constantino, John N. Kennon-McGill, Stefanie Weichselbaum, Claire Marrus, Natasha Haider, Alyzeh Glowinski, Anne L. Gillespie, Scott Klaiman, Cheryl Klin, Ami Jones, Warren Infant viewing of social scenes is under genetic control and atypical in autism |
title | Infant viewing of social scenes is under genetic control and atypical in autism |
title_full | Infant viewing of social scenes is under genetic control and atypical in autism |
title_fullStr | Infant viewing of social scenes is under genetic control and atypical in autism |
title_full_unstemmed | Infant viewing of social scenes is under genetic control and atypical in autism |
title_short | Infant viewing of social scenes is under genetic control and atypical in autism |
title_sort | infant viewing of social scenes is under genetic control and atypical in autism |
topic | Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5842695/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28700580 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature22999 |
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