“…These findings are consistent with previous studies linking increasing autistic traits to impaired neural gaze processing (Hasegawa et al, 2013;Nummenmaa et al, 2012), less awareness of eye contact (Madipakkam et al, 2019), less spontaneous reciprocity of direct gaze (Chen & Yoon, 2011) and less social learning using gaze cues (Hudson et al, 2012) within the typical population, suggesting the existence of a "broad autism phenotype" (Sucksmith et al, 2011) that involves a sub-clinical, autism-like manifestation of social difficulties. Also note that, in line with a more dimensional viewpoint for ASD, associations between ASD symptom severity and impaired motor resonance have often been observed within the clinical ASD population (Enticott et al, 2012;Fan et al, 2010;Wadsworth et al, 2018), also during the observation of actions in combination with different social gaze cues (Prinsen & Alaerts, 2022). Together, these studies in both clinical and non-clinical participant samples imply that autistic traits, as well as associated variability in the social domain, lie along a 'neuro-diverse' continuum ranging from mild or non-clinical manifestations to more severely impacted individuals who often also receive a clinical diagnosis of ASD.…”