Publication | Closed Access
Superior visual search in autism.
487
Citations
31
References
2001
Year
Superior Visual SearchEducationCognitionVisual Search TasksAttentionVisual Cognitive NeuroscienceSocial SciencesPsychologyNeurodiversityEarly VisionVisual CognitionCognitive DevelopmentAutismDevelopmental DisorderChild PsychologyCognitive ScienceSyndromic AutismCeiling EffectsVisual FunctionEye TrackingUnique Item DetectionNeuroscience
Children with a diagnosis of autism and normally developing children, matched for age and general ability, were tested on a series of visual search tasks in 2 separate experiments. The children with autism performed better than the normally developing children on difficult visual search tasks. This result occurred regardless of whether the target was uniquely defined by a single feature or a conjunction of features, as long as ceiling effects did not mask the difference. Superior visual search performance in autism can be seen as analogous to other reports of enhanced unique item detection in autism. Unique item detection in autism is discussed in the light of mechanisms proposed to be involved in normal visual search performance.
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