2010
DOI: 10.1002/aur.153
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Cortical underconnectivity coupled with preserved visuospatial cognition in autism: Evidence from an fMRI study of an embedded figures task

Abstract: Individuals with high-functioning autism sometimes exhibit intact or superior performance on visuospatial tasks, in contrast to impaired functioning in other domains such as language comprehension, executive tasks, and social functions. The goal of the current study was to investigate the neural bases of preserved visuospatial processing in high-functioning autism from the perspective of the cortical underconnectivity theory. We used a combination of behavioral, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), fu… Show more

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Cited by 144 publications
(134 citation statements)
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“…There is an ongoing discussion in the literature as to whether weak central coherence is necessarily a deficit . While it has been demonstrated through neuroimaging that frontal language areas are underconnected in autism (Damarla et al 2010;Washington et al 2010;Just et al 2007), this behavioral data converges to an underlying question about the role of language ability in highability HFA and its candidacy as a mechanism of support for EF in high-ability HFA. On the surface, one possible explanation for the emphasis on MI stems from the fact that it has twice as many items as the BRI and thus greater power.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…There is an ongoing discussion in the literature as to whether weak central coherence is necessarily a deficit . While it has been demonstrated through neuroimaging that frontal language areas are underconnected in autism (Damarla et al 2010;Washington et al 2010;Just et al 2007), this behavioral data converges to an underlying question about the role of language ability in highability HFA and its candidacy as a mechanism of support for EF in high-ability HFA. On the surface, one possible explanation for the emphasis on MI stems from the fact that it has twice as many items as the BRI and thus greater power.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…These findings suggest that individuals with ASD did not require as many resources as TD individuals in order to achieve the same level of performance, which supports the idea of superiority of Figure Disembedding in individuals with ASD. Furthermore, the fMRI study conducted by Manjaly et al (2007) utilized a different control task than the previous two studies, and concluded that the ASD group showed enhanced local processing in visual areas, a conclusion supported by Damarla et al (2010). Silk et al (2006) investigated activity levels in frontoparietal networks during Mental Rotation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Frontal brain activation is particularly interesting because it is thought to be involved in the execution of complex tasks (Silk et al 2006). Damarla et al (2010) also found decreased frontal activation in ASD participants compared to TD controls. These findings suggest that individuals with ASD did not require as many resources as TD individuals in order to achieve the same level of performance, which supports the idea of superiority of Figure Disembedding in individuals with ASD.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Accordingly, coordinated processing between separate brain regions, known as functional connectivity (FC), that is, typically quantified by correlational measures of statistical interdependency (Friston, 1994), has been assessed in resting‐state (Di Martino et al, 2014; Gotts et al, 2012; Supekar et al, 2013) and in a variety of tasks probing speech comprehension (Just, Cherkassky, Keller, & Minshew, 2004), visuomotor performance (Mizuno, Villalobos, Davies, Dahl, & MĂŒller, 2006; Turner, Frost, Linsenbardt, McIlroy, & MĂŒller, 2006; Villalobos, Mizuno, Dahl, Kemmotsu, & MĂŒller, 2005), visuospatial abilities (Damarla et al, 2010; Liu, Cherkassky, Minshew, & Just, 2011), face processing (Kleinhans et al, 2008; Rudie et al, 2012), or executive functions (Just, Cherkassky, Keller, Kana, & Minshew, 2007; Kana, Keller, Minshew, & Just, 2007; Koshino et al, 2008). The big picture emerging from those reports is lowered FC between frontal and posterior brain regions (see Vissers, Cohen, & Geurts, 2012 for a review), as formulated in the underconnectivity theory of autism (Just, Keller, Malave, Kana, & Varma, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%