心理学
自闭症
焦虑
听觉亢进
神经认知
发展心理学
人口
认知心理学
耳鸣
神经科学
认知
精神科
医学
环境卫生
作者
Zachary J. Williams,Jason He,Carissa J. Cascio,Tiffany G. Woynaroski
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.neubiorev.2020.11.030
摘要
Atypical behavioral responses to environmental sounds are common in autistic children and adults, with 50–70 % of this population exhibiting decreased sound tolerance (DST) at some point in their lives. This symptom is a source of significant distress and impairment across the lifespan, contributing to anxiety, challenging behaviors, reduced community participation, and school/workplace difficulties. However, relatively little is known about its phenomenology or neurocognitive underpinnings. The present article synthesizes a large body of literature on the phenomenology and pathophysiology of DST-related conditions to generate a comprehensive theoretical account of DST in autism. Notably, we argue against conceptualizing DST as a unified construct, suggesting that it be separated into three phenomenologically distinct conditions: hyperacusis (the perception of everyday sounds as excessively loud or painful), misophonia (an acquired aversive reaction to specific sounds), and phonophobia (a specific phobia of sound), each responsible for a portion of observed DST behaviors. We further elaborate our framework by proposing preliminary neurocognitive models of hyperacusis, misophonia, and phonophobia that incorporate neurophysiologic findings from studies of autism.
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