Gaze Behavior of Children with ASD toward Pictures of Facial Expressions

Published in Autism Research and Treatment, 2015

Summary

This study examined gaze behavior of children with autism spectrum disorder toward pictures of facial expressions. The study used eye-tracking measures to describe how children looked at facial expression stimuli.

The study contributes to the Measuring and Autism Support lines by treating gaze allocation to facial expressions as an observable response pattern. It also provides a basis for later work on facial expressions, social attention, and technology-supported assessment.

Research line

  • Measuring: eye-tracking measurement of gaze behavior toward facial expressions
  • Autism Support: assessment of social attention in children with autism spectrum disorder
  • Facial Expressions: observation of responses to social visual stimuli

Matsuda, S., Minagawa, Y., & Yamamoto, J. (2015). Gaze behavior of children with ASD toward pictures of facial expressions. Autism Research and Treatment, 2015, 617190. https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/617190


Recommended citation: Matsuda, S., Minagawa, Y., & Yamamoto, J. (2015). Gaze behavior of children with ASD toward pictures of facial expressions. *Autism Research and Treatment*, 2015, 617190. https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/617190
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