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Towards an Understanding of Sex Differences in Socio-Emotional Processing in Autism

Séminaire / Eq M.Pereira

On May 6, 2026

Séminaire par Adeline Lacroix (Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Canada)

Autism is characterized by persistent difficulties in social interaction and social cognition. These difficulties are partly related to atypical processing of socio-emotional signals, including emotional facial expressions. Although core autistic characteristics are observed in both males and females, increasing evidence suggests that autistic females often show a more subtle socio-emotional profile, marked by greater attention to social stimuli and more typical-appearing social behavior. However, this profile remains insufficiently characterized, and the underlying neurobiological mechanisms are still poorly understood.
Given the central role of face processing in social cognition, we conducted a series of behavioral and EEG studies to investigate sex differences in autism during face processing at different stages of attentional processing. Our results reveal sex-related differences in autism from early stages of face processing, with autistic females showing an intermediate profile between autistic males and non-autistic females. Together, these findings indicate that aggregating males and females may obscure meaningful neurocognitive differences in socio-emotional processing and highlight the need for sex-informed experimental designs and theoretical frameworks in autism research. They further suggest that early differences in socio-emotional processing may contribute to the subtler phenotypic presentation of autism in females.
 
Adeline Lacroix est invitée par Michael Pereira.

Date

On May 6, 2026
Complément date

11h30

Localisation

Complément lieu

Amphi Kampf

Submitted on April 28, 2026

Updated on April 29, 2026