Impaired sadness recognition is linked to social interaction deficit in autism.
about
Wanting it Too Much: An Inverse Relation Between Social Motivation and Facial Emotion Recognition in Autism Spectrum Disorder.The Interplay between Emotion and Cognition in Autism Spectrum Disorder: Implications for Developmental Theory.A genome-wide association study of autism incorporating autism diagnostic interview-revised, autism diagnostic observation schedule, and social responsiveness scale.The application of eye-tracking technology in the study of autism.Facing the challenge of teaching emotions to individuals with low- and high-functioning autism using a new Serious game: a pilot studyModulation of attentional blink with emotional faces in typical development and in autism spectrum disorders.Social cognition in children at familial high-risk of developing an eating disorder.Identification of Emotional Facial Expressions: Effects of Expression, Intensity, and Sex on Eye GazeDiminished sensitivity to sad facial expressions in high functioning autism spectrum disorders is associated with symptomatology and adaptive functioning.Social communication and emotion difficulties and second to fourth digit ratio in a large community-based sampleThe perception and identification of facial emotions in individuals with autism spectrum disorders using the Let's Face It! Emotion Skills BatteryEmotion perception deficits following traumatic brain injury: a review of the evidence and rationale for intervention.Effects of the Female Estrous Cycle on the Sexual Behaviors and Ultrasonic Vocalizations of Male C57BL/6 and Autistic BTBR T+ tf/J MiceGender differences in the relationship between social communication and emotion recognition.Recognition of emotion from facial expressions with direct or averted eye gaze and varying expression intensities in children with autism disorder and typically developing childrenEmotional processing in Parkinson's disease: a systematic review.Are emotion impairments unique to, universal, or specific in autism spectrum disorder? A comprehensive review.Evidence for impaired verbal identification but intact nonverbal recognition of fearful body postures in Asperger's syndrome.Recognition of emotions in autism: a formal meta-analysis.Childhood Facial Recognition Predicts Adolescent Symptom Severity in Autism Spectrum Disorder.Impaired Recognition of Basic Emotions from Facial Expressions in Young People with Autism Spectrum Disorder: Assessing the Importance of Expression Intensity.Impaired detection of happy facial expressions in autism.Reactive aggression among children with and without autism spectrum disorder.Selective Impairment of Basic Emotion Recognition in People with Autism: Discrimination Thresholds for Recognition of Facial Expressions of Varying Intensities.Specific Patterns of Emotion Recognition from Faces in Children with ASD: Results of a Cross-Modal Matching Paradigm.Cerebellar Contribution to Social CognitionImpairment in face processing in autism spectrum disorder: a developmental perspective.Metacognitive processes in emotion recognition: are they different in adults with Asperger's disorder?Facial expression recognition as a candidate marker for autism spectrum disorder: how frequent and severe are deficits?Categorical Speech Perception in Adults with Autism Spectrum Conditions.Genetic contribution to 'theory of mind' in adolescence.A multimodal approach to emotion recognition ability in autism spectrum disorders.Understanding emotional transfer in children with autism spectrum disorders.Face processing in children with autism spectrum disorder: independent or interactive processing of facial identity and facial expression?The relationship between emotion recognition ability and social skills in young children with autism.Selective attention to facial emotion and identity in children with autism: evidence for global identity and local emotion.Social perception and WAIS-IV Performance in adolescents and adults diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome and Autism.Eye-tracking study on facial emotion recognition tasks in individuals with high-functioning autism spectrum disorders.Parents’ impaired emotion recognition abilities are related to children’s autistic symptoms in autism spectrum disorder
P2860
Q30275694-B0F26E78-F928-40BF-A83B-935D5D131629Q30459172-73A91BC3-885F-4506-89FC-2112FB77240FQ33161703-06D9EE7E-7ECD-4546-96C6-6098BAA8094CQ33281980-96ED0B03-4703-4290-9DEF-2D2B6E32C73CQ33890585-471A194D-5EAB-4424-B2E4-F8E1FBB8DC30Q34030623-FD452421-DEAC-475A-A428-4586CE2E01FDQ35925983-C7338DD9-852B-4C84-B71D-4F88923F4106Q36220143-EDDF76E3-0397-4451-87ED-59EBC6ED5430Q36251668-8DD1F18F-E8EE-416A-89C2-F70E593598E1Q36409966-E2BCEB9B-D2B7-4587-96BD-1D81F37FFCBDQ36420139-D9CED95D-69C3-4538-BE3D-B65DA219C278Q37199390-0FD3F3DA-5FC8-4FAC-9D35-532C1853078EQ37208059-6C704E80-B826-410F-8598-12BB3B9C47A0Q37706570-9D753195-0FCB-43B6-97F5-57884F5EC28CQ37717796-6DA9BF31-3BD6-43D5-9A2E-09E1CD21A2E8Q37967601-35180D15-0A96-4BE1-B59E-FDC2BE06465FQ38079627-62F05CB5-7714-40AE-B74B-11CCAE8A3D7FQ38460848-DACB9D7F-EEE6-4BBB-AD0E-3745E1E2821EQ38461862-B56CA9C9-C653-471D-84D1-F6038B551A4BQ39046531-22768A6D-411A-4F84-90B3-808F8F8DF5F5Q40265901-9386F928-4A2F-4432-8B06-6D26685D661EQ42683841-AA8F25CA-6AF2-4A99-9FBF-9E8ED8DD59BAQ45953986-85D428A2-931D-439F-B479-D3F1DC1C6A43Q47277871-8D5FE931-E89B-4125-AA7A-5F3AB2697137Q47571871-DB528F54-0138-469C-AB52-AC935BE187A9Q47618391-0DF12720-C847-4F55-8574-B293F1F70E6CQ47888390-C7C8DB55-BC5F-4DE7-B5C2-1A739736E59CQ47952859-CE62AAE5-A6B4-4990-B9B6-752F0242756CQ49425603-FE8B387E-0D45-453E-BA6B-EDFBEE2E1B7EQ50143085-84688920-3BF4-482B-9C6A-511B22372C23Q50301335-A8B7BE1D-1992-4B08-B3FB-E2692AD0C0BDQ50301834-41F1B74A-9CF9-42CA-A334-4E00E132BB34Q50301975-786EE60C-9964-44B6-B8E9-93599179B42CQ50302232-7FD6FB90-AA43-45CD-905C-82410F266482Q50303788-81DF088C-F1D8-43AD-AE69-BD50C5A281C3Q50306304-171F7212-E6DE-405A-9F47-4D51615A2BAEQ50313303-43DE9FF8-BE69-4334-84A0-10A4C3D94E68Q50418498-4C0114A6-D77C-4D00-8EF7-1248141DDB71Q59135089-66093F10-071C-4B45-A9FC-CC1672BFE981
P2860
Impaired sadness recognition is linked to social interaction deficit in autism.
description
2006 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2006年の論文
@ja
2006年学术文章
@wuu
2006年学术文章
@zh
2006年学术文章
@zh-cn
2006年学术文章
@zh-hans
2006年学术文章
@zh-my
2006年学术文章
@zh-sg
2006年學術文章
@yue
2006年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Impaired sadness recognition is linked to social interaction deficit in autism.
@en
Impaired sadness recognition is linked to social interaction deficit in autism.
@nl
type
label
Impaired sadness recognition is linked to social interaction deficit in autism.
@en
Impaired sadness recognition is linked to social interaction deficit in autism.
@nl
prefLabel
Impaired sadness recognition is linked to social interaction deficit in autism.
@en
Impaired sadness recognition is linked to social interaction deficit in autism.
@nl
P2093
P1433
P1476
Impaired sadness recognition is linked to social interaction deficit in autism.
@en
P2093
David Skuse
Rebecca Chilvers
Zillah Boraston
P304
P356
10.1016/J.NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA.2006.11.010
P577
2006-12-29T00:00:00Z