Probabilistic perception, empathy, and dynamic homeostasis: Insights in autism spectrum disorders and conduct disorders

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Abstract

Homeostasis is not a permanent and stable state but instead results from conflicting forces. Therefore, infants have to engage in dynamic exchanges with their environment, in biological, cognitive, and affective domains. Empathy is an adaptive response to these environmental challenges, which contributes to reaching proper dynamic homeostasis and development. Empathy relies on implicit interactive processes, namely probabilistic perception and synchrony, which will be reviewed in the article. If typically-developed neonates are fully equipped to automatically and synchronously interact with their human environment, conduct disorders (CD) and autism spectrum disorders (ASD) present with impairments in empathetic communication, e.g., emotional arousal and facial emotion processing. In addition sensorimotor resonance is lacking in ASD, and emotional concern and semantic empathy are impaired in CD with Callous-Unemotional traits.

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APA

Guilé, J. M. (2014, January 27). Probabilistic perception, empathy, and dynamic homeostasis: Insights in autism spectrum disorders and conduct disorders. Frontiers in Public Health. Frontiers Media S. A. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2014.00004

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