TopicNeuroscience

arousal modulation

Content Overview
3Total items
2ePosters
1Seminar

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Is it Autism or Alexithymia? explaining atypical socioemotional processing

Hélio Clemente Cuve
University of Oxford
Dec 1, 2020

Emotion processing is thought to be impaired in autism and linked to atypical visual exploration and arousal modulation to others faces and gaze, yet evidence is equivocal. We propose that, where observed, atypical socioemotional processing is due to alexithymia, a distinct but frequently co-occurring condition which affects emotional self-awareness and Interoception. In study 1 (N = 80), we tested this hypothesis by studying the spatio-temporal dynamics and entropy of eye-gaze during emotion processing tasks. Evidence from traditional and novel methods revealed that atypical eye-gaze and emotion recognition is best predicted by alexithymia in both autistic and non-autistic individuals. In Study 2 (N = 70), we assessed interoceptive and autonomic signals implicated in socioemotional processing, and found evidence for alexithymia (not autism) driven effects on gaze and arousal modulation to emotions. We also conducted two large-scale studies (N = 1300), using confirmatory factor-analytic and network modelling and found evidence that Alexithymia and Autism are distinct at both a latent level and their intercorrelations. We argue that: 1) models of socioemotional processing in autism should conceptualise difficulties as intrinsic to alexithymia, and 2) assessment of alexithymia is crucial for diagnosis and personalised interventions in autism.

ePosterNeuroscience

OXYTOCIN SIGNALLING IN THE NUCLEUS INCERTUS: IMPLICATIONS FOR TRANSVENTRICULAR AROUSAL MODULATION

Alan Kania, Konstantinos Afordakos, Gniewosz Drwiega, Kamil Pradel, Aleksandra Trenk, Anna Gugula, Lukasz Chrobok, Przybylska Kinga, Arthur Lefevre, Quirin Krabichler, Marina Eliava, Sherie Ma, Carlo Cifani, Andrew Gundlach, Anna Blasiak, Valery Grinevich

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

Bayesian inference and arousal modulation in spatial perception to mitigate stochasticity and volatility

David Meijer, Fabian Dorok, Roberto Barumerli, Burcu Bayram, Michelle Spierings, Ulrich Pomper, Robert Baumgartner

Bernstein Conference 2024

arousal modulation coverage

3 items

ePoster2
Seminar1

Share your knowledge

Know something about arousal modulation? Help the community by contributing seminars, talks, or research.

Contribute content
Domain spotlight

Explore how arousal modulation research is advancing inside Neuroscience.

Visit domain

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.