TY - JOUR
T1 - The lost neural hierarchy of the autistic self-locked-out of the mental self and its default-mode network
AU - Lian, Fuxin
AU - Northoff, Georg
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding: This research was funded by the Humanities and Social Sciences Project of Ministry of Education of China, grant number17YJC880058.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 by the authors.
PY - 2021/5
Y1 - 2021/5
N2 - Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is characterized by a fundamental change in selfawareness including seemingly paradoxical features like increased ego-centeredness and weakened self-referentiality. What is the neural basis of this so-called “self-paradox”? Conducting a metaanalytic review of fMRI rest and task studies, we show that ASD exhibits consistent hypofunction in anterior and posterior midline regions of the default-mode network (DMN) in both rest and task with decreased self-non-self differentiation. Relying on a multilayered nested hierarchical model of self, as recently established (Qin et al. 2020), we propose that ASD subjects cannot access the most upper layer of their self, the DMN-based mental self-they are locked-out of their own DMN and its mental self. This, in turn, results in strong weakening of their self-referentiality with decreases in both self-awareness and self-other distinction. Moreover, this blocks the extension of non-DMN cortical and subcortical regions at the lower layers of the physical self to the DMN-based upper layer of the mental self, including self-other distinction. The ASD subjects remain stuck and restricted to their intero- and exteroceptive selves as manifested in a relative increase in ego-centeredness (as compared to self-referentiality). This amounts to what we describe as “Hierarchical Model of Autistic Self” (HAS), which, characterizing the autistic self in hierarchical and spatiotemporal terms, aligns well with and extends current theories of ASD including predictive coding and weak central coherence.
AB - Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is characterized by a fundamental change in selfawareness including seemingly paradoxical features like increased ego-centeredness and weakened self-referentiality. What is the neural basis of this so-called “self-paradox”? Conducting a metaanalytic review of fMRI rest and task studies, we show that ASD exhibits consistent hypofunction in anterior and posterior midline regions of the default-mode network (DMN) in both rest and task with decreased self-non-self differentiation. Relying on a multilayered nested hierarchical model of self, as recently established (Qin et al. 2020), we propose that ASD subjects cannot access the most upper layer of their self, the DMN-based mental self-they are locked-out of their own DMN and its mental self. This, in turn, results in strong weakening of their self-referentiality with decreases in both self-awareness and self-other distinction. Moreover, this blocks the extension of non-DMN cortical and subcortical regions at the lower layers of the physical self to the DMN-based upper layer of the mental self, including self-other distinction. The ASD subjects remain stuck and restricted to their intero- and exteroceptive selves as manifested in a relative increase in ego-centeredness (as compared to self-referentiality). This amounts to what we describe as “Hierarchical Model of Autistic Self” (HAS), which, characterizing the autistic self in hierarchical and spatiotemporal terms, aligns well with and extends current theories of ASD including predictive coding and weak central coherence.
KW - Autism spectrum disorder
KW - Default-mode network
KW - Mental-self
KW - Predictive coding
KW - Self-reference
KW - Theory of mind
KW - Weaken central coherence
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U2 - 10.3390/brainsci11050574
DO - 10.3390/brainsci11050574
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85105673377
SN - 2076-3425
VL - 11
JO - Brain Sciences
JF - Brain Sciences
IS - 5
M1 - 574
ER -