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EEG during dynamic facial emotion processing reveals neural activity patterns associated with autistic traits in children

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posted on 2025-02-17, 03:38 authored by Aron HillAron Hill, Talitha FordTalitha Ford, Neil W Bailey, Jarrad LumJarrad Lum, Felicity J Bigelow, Lindsay M Oberman, Peter EnticottPeter Enticott
Abstract Altered brain connectivity and atypical neural oscillations have been observed in autism, yet their relationship with autistic traits in nonclinical populations remains underexplored. Here, we employ electroencephalography to examine functional connectivity, oscillatory power, and broadband aperiodic activity during a dynamic facial emotion processing task in 101 typically developing children aged 4 to 12 years. We investigate associations between these electrophysiological measures of brain dynamics and autistic traits as assessed by the Social Responsiveness Scale, 2nd Edition (SRS-2). Our results revealed that increased facial emotion processing–related connectivity across theta (4 to 7 Hz) and beta (13 to 30 Hz) frequencies correlated positively with higher SRS-2 scores, predominantly in right-lateralized (theta) and bilateral (beta) cortical networks. Additionally, a steeper 1/f-like aperiodic slope (spectral exponent) across fronto-central electrodes was associated with higher SRS-2 scores. Greater aperiodic-adjusted theta and alpha oscillatory power further correlated with both higher SRS-2 scores and steeper aperiodic slopes. These findings underscore important links between facial emotion processing-related brain dynamics and autistic traits in typically developing children. Future work could extend these findings to assess these electroencephalography-derived markers as potential mechanisms underlying behavioral difficulties in autism.

History

Journal

Cerebral Cortex

Volume

35

Article number

bhaf020

Pagination

1-15

Location

Oxford, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1047-3211

eISSN

1460-2199

Language

eng

Issue

2

Publisher

Oxford University Press