Changes in Intrinsic Activity of the Primary Somatosensory Cortex Causally Explain Differences in Emotion Perception in Autism
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2026
Citazione:
Changes in Intrinsic Activity of the Primary Somatosensory Cortex Causally Explain Differences in Emotion Perception in Autism / M. Fanghella, D. Dima, D. Pinotsis, S.B. Gaigg, B. Calvo‐merino, B. Forster. - In: AUTISM RESEARCH. - ISSN 1939-3806. - 19:4(2026 Apr), pp. e70197.1-e70197.14. [10.1002/aur.70197]
Abstract:
Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is characterized by certain difficulties in emotion-
related processing. Recent research using
electroencephalography (EEG) to measure somatosensory evoked potentials during emotion perception has shown reduced em
-
bodiment of emotional expressions in autistic compared to neurotypical individuals, independently from differences in visual
processing. However, the underlying neural dynamics are not clear. In this study, we use Dynamic Causal Modeling (DCM) on
EEG data to investigate whether reduced embodiment during emotion processing in ASD individuals is caused by changes in
intrinsic connectivity within the somatosensory cortex, or by top-
down modulatory effects from higher-
order frontal areas. We
constructed a model involving the primary and secondary right somatosensory cortex, the right supplementary motor area and
the right inferior frontal gyrus, and tested effective connectivity during emotion or gender discrimination tasks in two groups
of ASD and typically developing (TD) participants (
n
=
38, male and female, 2 females). Our results reveal that task-
related dif
-
ferences in electrocortical activity between the emotion and gender tasks are causally explained by changes in intrinsic activity
within the right primary somatosensory cortex (rS1) in both TD and ASD. Importantly, these intrinsic changes in rS1 are signifi
-
cantly different between TD and ASD groups and individual task-
related changes in rS1 significantly correlate with alexithymia
traits. Our study provides novel evidence on the neural dynamics underlying difficulties in emotion processing in ASD individu
-
als, highlighting that differential intrinsic activations of the rS1 are causally involved in such difficulties, and suggests that they are mediated by alexithymia.
related processing. Recent research using
electroencephalography (EEG) to measure somatosensory evoked potentials during emotion perception has shown reduced em
-
bodiment of emotional expressions in autistic compared to neurotypical individuals, independently from differences in visual
processing. However, the underlying neural dynamics are not clear. In this study, we use Dynamic Causal Modeling (DCM) on
EEG data to investigate whether reduced embodiment during emotion processing in ASD individuals is caused by changes in
intrinsic connectivity within the somatosensory cortex, or by top-
down modulatory effects from higher-
order frontal areas. We
constructed a model involving the primary and secondary right somatosensory cortex, the right supplementary motor area and
the right inferior frontal gyrus, and tested effective connectivity during emotion or gender discrimination tasks in two groups
of ASD and typically developing (TD) participants (
n
=
38, male and female, 2 females). Our results reveal that task-
related dif
-
ferences in electrocortical activity between the emotion and gender tasks are causally explained by changes in intrinsic activity
within the right primary somatosensory cortex (rS1) in both TD and ASD. Importantly, these intrinsic changes in rS1 are signifi
-
cantly different between TD and ASD groups and individual task-
related changes in rS1 significantly correlate with alexithymia
traits. Our study provides novel evidence on the neural dynamics underlying difficulties in emotion processing in ASD individu
-
als, highlighting that differential intrinsic activations of the rS1 are causally involved in such difficulties, and suggests that they are mediated by alexithymia.
Tipologia IRIS:
01 - Articolo su periodico
Keywords:
autism spectrum disorder; dynamic causal modeling; EEG; embodiment; emotion; somatosensory;
Elenco autori:
M. Fanghella, D. Dima, D. Pinotsis, S.B. Gaigg, B. Calvo‐merino, B. Forster
Link alla scheda completa: