Neurocognitive and electrophysiological
evidence of altered face processing in
parents of children with autism: Implications
for a model of abnormal development of
social brain circuitry in autism
GERALDINE DAWSON,
a, b
SARA JANE WEBB,
a, b
ELLEN WIJSMAN,
a, b
GERARD SCHELLENBERG,
a, c
ANNETTE ESTES,
a,b
JEFFREY MUNSON,
a
and SUSAN FAJA
a, b
a
University of Washington Autism Center and Center on Human Development and
Disability;
b
University of Washington; and
c
Veteran’sAffairs Medical Center, Seattle
Abstract
Neuroimaging and behavioral studies have shown that children and adults with autism have impaired face
recognition. Individuals with autism also exhibit atypical event-related brain potentials to faces, characterized by a
failure to show a negative component ~ N170! latency advantage to face compared to nonface stimuli and a bilateral,
rather than right lateralized, pattern of N170 distribution. In this report, performance by 143 parents of children
with autism on standardized verbal, visual–spatial, and face recognition tasks was examined. It was found that
parents of children with autism exhibited a significant decrement in face recognition ability relative to their verbal
and visual spatial abilities. Event-related brain potentials to face and nonface stimuli were examined in 21 parents of
children with autism and 21 control adults. Parents of children with autism showed an atypical event-related
potential response to faces, which mirrored the pattern shown by children and adults with autism. These results raise
the possibility that face processing might be a functional trait marker of genetic susceptibility to autism. Discussion
focuses on hypotheses regarding the neurodevelopmental and genetic basis of altered face processing in autism. A
general model of the normal emergence of social brain circuitry in the first year of life is proposed, followed by a
discussion of how the trajectory of normal development of social brain circuitry, including cortical specialization for
face processing, is altered in individuals with autism. The hypothesis that genetic-mediated dysfunction of the
dopamine reward system, especially its functioning in social contexts, might account for altered face processing in
individuals with autism and their relatives is discussed.
Autism is a developmental disorder involv-
ing life-long impairments in social inter-
action and communication. Although evidence
for a genetic basis exists, autism risk genes
have yet to be found. Evidence for genetic
influence in autism is strong, with estimates
of heritability ranging from 91 to 93% ~ Bai-
ley, Le Couteur, Gottesman, Bolton, Simo-
noff, Yuzda, & Rutter, 1995!. Several studies
have shown that identical twins are 60–95%
concordant for autism ~ Bailey et al., 1995;
Folstein & Rutter, 1977; Ritvo, Freeman,
Mason–Brothers, Mo, & Ritvo, 1985; Stef-
fenburg, Gillberg, Hellgren, Andersson, Gill-
berg, Jakobsson, & Bohman, 1989!. Fraternal
twins and siblings have a much lower concor-
dance rate, with estimates ranging from 3 to
The writing of this paper and the studies reported herein
were funded by a grant from the National Institute of
Child Health and Human Development ~ NICHD Grant
U19HD34565!, which is part of the NICHD Collabora-
tive Program of Excellence in Autism, and a center grant
from the National Institute of Mental Health ~ NIMH Grant
U54MH066399!, which is part of the NIH STAART Cen-
ters Program.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to: Ger-
aldine Dawson, University of Washington Autism Center,
Box 357920, University of Washington, Seattle, WA98195.
Development and Psychopathology 17 ~2005!, 679–697
Copyright © 2005 Cambridge University Press
Printed in the United States of America
DOI: 10.10170S0954579405050327
679