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Accumulating evidence indicates that co-occurring alexithymia underlies several facets of the social-emotional difficulties common in individuals with autism spectrum disorder. The mechanisms involved, however, remain poorly understood because measuring alexithymia relies heavily on self-report. To address this issue, carefully matched groups of individuals with autism spectrum disorder and comparison participants rated 70 emotion-inducing pictures on subjectively experienced arousal while skin conductance responses were monitored objectively. The results demonstrated reliable correlations between these subjective and objective measures, and in both groups, around 25% of individual differences in this correlation (i.e. in emotion-relevant interoception) were accounted for by self-reported alexithymia. In the context of the wider literature, this suggests that alexithymia involves a disruption in how physiological arousal modulates the subjective experience of feelings in those with and without a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder. Since mindfulness-based therapies foster greater awareness of thoughts, feelings and bodily sensations, the findings also have implications for how the symptoms and consequences of alexithymia (e.g. anxiety) might be ameliorated.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1177/1362361316667062

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2018-02-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

22

Pages

227 - 231

Total pages

4

Keywords

alexithymia, arousal, autism, emotion, interoception, Adult, Affective Symptoms, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Case-Control Studies, Emotions, Female, Galvanic Skin Response, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Photic Stimulation