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When the world becomes 'too real': a Bayesian explanation of autistic perception

by: Elizabeth Pellicano, David Burr
Trends in Cognitive Sciences, Vol. 16, No. 10. (1 October 2012), pp. 504-510, doi:10.1016/j.tics.2012.08.009  Key: citeulike:11203603

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Abstract

Perceptual experience is influenced both by incoming sensory information and prior knowledge about the world, a concept recently formalised within Bayesian decision theory. We propose that Bayesian models can be applied to autism a neurodevelopmental condition with atypicalities in sensation and perception to pinpoint fundamental differences in perceptual mechanisms. We suggest specifically that attenuated Bayesian priors hypo-priors may be responsible for the unique perceptual experience of autistic people, leading to a tendency to perceive the world more accurately rather than modulated by prior experience. In this account, we consider how hypo-priors might explain key features of autism the broad range of sensory and other non-social atypicalities in addition to the phenomenological differences in autistic perception.


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