One step ahead: Prediction of other people's behaviour in healthy and autistic individuals 2013-2016

Bach, Patric (2019). One step ahead: Prediction of other people's behaviour in healthy and autistic individuals 2013-2016. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Archive. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-852384

This is the latest version of this item.

Humans are masters in predicting others’ behavior. By watching our child’s facial expression, we know exactly which toy she will go for. When seeing someone frown at an open window, we are not surprised when she gets up and closes it. Conversely, a breakdown of these predictions might be one reason why social interactions are so confusing to those with autism. This project tests, using behavioral and psychophysical measures, whether there is a sophisticated mechanism in our brains that ‘knows’ which cues signal the intentions of others and uses this knowledge to predict these people’s actions (eg, looking at something signals interest, a smile signals the tendency to approach). The first aim is to demonstrate that predictions of other’s behavior are indeed generated when watching others. We will test whether the perception of different social cues is automatically converted into predictions of their future actions. A second aim is to find out how these predictions come about, and specifically whether these predictions rely on our own action knowledge. A third and final aim is to establish whether such predictions are crucial for social interactions, and whether their breakdown is related to the social difficulties in individuals with autism spectrum disorder.

Data description (abstract)

The data collection contains experimental data for five independent publications, published as part of the ESRC grant “One step ahead: Prediction of other people's behavior in healthy and autistic individuals”. For each publication, one zip is uploaded, containing all relevant raw data, the summary data used for the statistical analyses, as well as readme files, describing analysis procedures and coding methods.

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Bach Patric Plymouth University
Sponsors: Economic and Social Research Council
Grant reference: ES/J019178/1
Topic classification: Science and technology
Society and culture
Psychology
Keywords: cognitive processes, perception, motor processes, autism spectrum disorders
Project title: One step ahead: Prediction of other people's behavior in healthy and autistic individuals.
Grant holders: Patric Bach, R Ellis, Rebecca McKenzie, Matthew Hudson
Project dates:
FromTo
1 January 201325 March 2016
Date published: 23 Aug 2019 13:48
Last modified: 23 Aug 2019 13:48

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