“…Difficulties in perceiving and discriminating faces have been well documented in individuals with ASD (e.g., see Dawson, Webb, & McPartland, 2005, for review). Children and adults with ASD show poorer performance on a variety of face processing tasks compared with non-autistic individuals, including face recognition (Boucher, Lewis, & Collis, 1998;Ewing, Pellicano, & Rhodes, 2011a), face discrimination (Ewing et al, 2011a;Wallace, Coleman, & Bailey, 2008a), expression recognition (Rump, Giovannelli, Minshew, & Strauss, 2009;Wallace, Coleman, & Bailey, 2008b), and eye-gaze perception (Wallace, Coleman, Pascalis, & Bailey, 2006). Even when their performance is similar to that of non-autistic individuals, individuals with ASD appear to use atypical strategies, such as paying more attention to the mouth than the eyes (Klin, Jones, Schultz, Volkmar, & Cohen, 2002;Neumann, Spezio, Piven, & Adolphs, 2006;although see Falck-Ytter & von Hofsten, 2011, for a critique), and applying a local rather than holistic processing style (Joseph & Tanaka, 2002).…”