TY - JOUR
T1 - Mimicry and social affiliation with virtual partner are decreased in autism
AU - Tunçgenç, Bahar
AU - Koch, Carolyn
AU - Eigsti, Inge Marie
AU - Mostofsky, Stewart H.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Tatevik Khoja-Eynatyan and Adam Rosenblatt for their help with preparing the mimicry stimuli, the psychology associates and research assistants at CNIR, KKI for their help with data collection, and all families and children for taking part in the study. Participant recruitment was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) R01 MH106564-02 , for which SHM is a Co-investigator, NIH P50HD103538 and UL1TR000424 .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors
PY - 2023/2
Y1 - 2023/2
N2 - Copying other people's mannerisms (i.e., mimicry) occurs spontaneously during social interactions, and is thought to contribute to sharing emotions, affiliation with partners and interaction quality. While previous research shows decreased mimicry of emotional facial expressions in autism spectrum disorders (ASD), we know relatively little about how non-emotional, non-facial behavioural mimicry manifests and, more importantly, what it means for autistic individuals’ social interactions. In a controlled, semi-naturalistic interaction setting, this study examined how often autistic and neurotypical (NT) children mimicked a virtual partner's non-facial mannerisms as they engaged in an interactive story-telling activity. Subsequently, children reported how affiliated they felt towards their interaction partner using an established implicit measure of closeness and a set of questions. Results revealed reduced mimicry (p = .001, φ = 0.38) and less affiliation (p = .01, φ = 0.33) in ASD relative to NT children. Mimicry was associated with affiliation for NT (r(23) = 0.64, p = .0009), but not ASD, children (r(31) = 0.07, p = .72). These results suggest an autism-associated reduction in mimicry and that mimicry during social interactions may not substantially contribute to affiliation in autism.
AB - Copying other people's mannerisms (i.e., mimicry) occurs spontaneously during social interactions, and is thought to contribute to sharing emotions, affiliation with partners and interaction quality. While previous research shows decreased mimicry of emotional facial expressions in autism spectrum disorders (ASD), we know relatively little about how non-emotional, non-facial behavioural mimicry manifests and, more importantly, what it means for autistic individuals’ social interactions. In a controlled, semi-naturalistic interaction setting, this study examined how often autistic and neurotypical (NT) children mimicked a virtual partner's non-facial mannerisms as they engaged in an interactive story-telling activity. Subsequently, children reported how affiliated they felt towards their interaction partner using an established implicit measure of closeness and a set of questions. Results revealed reduced mimicry (p = .001, φ = 0.38) and less affiliation (p = .01, φ = 0.33) in ASD relative to NT children. Mimicry was associated with affiliation for NT (r(23) = 0.64, p = .0009), but not ASD, children (r(31) = 0.07, p = .72). These results suggest an autism-associated reduction in mimicry and that mimicry during social interactions may not substantially contribute to affiliation in autism.
KW - Autism
KW - Children
KW - Mimicry
KW - Social affiliation
KW - Social interactions
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U2 - 10.1016/j.rasd.2022.102073
DO - 10.1016/j.rasd.2022.102073
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85142487598
SN - 1750-9467
VL - 100
JO - Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders
JF - Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders
M1 - 102073
ER -