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Dimensional Arousal and Categorical Gaze Instability: Uncoupling the Baseline Oculomotor Phenotypes of Autism and ADHD

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Background: Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) share substantial clinical and physiological overlap. While naturalistic and sensory-driven paradigms increasingly capture evoked neurophysiological responses, the intrinsic baseline physiology of these conditions remains poorly defined. We aimed to characterize resting-state autonomic arousal and oculomotor stability across the ASD-ADHD spectrum using both continuous (RDoC) and categorical (DSM-5)...

Background: Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) share substantial clinical and physiological overlap. While naturalistic and sensory-driven paradigms increasingly capture evoked neurophysiological responses, the intrinsic baseline physiology of these conditions remains poorly defined. We aimed to characterize resting-state autonomic arousal and oculomotor stability across the ASD-ADHD spectrum using both continuous (RDoC) and categorical (DSM-5) analytical frameworks. Methods: We analyzed resting-state eye-tracking data from a large pediatric cohort (N = 2,640) from the Healthy Brain Network. During an unconstrained baseline, we extracted Pupil Relative Volatility (Coefficient of Variation [CV]) to index intrinsic autonomic arousal, and the Bivariate Contour Ellipse Area (BCEA) to index spatial gaze instability. Data were evaluated using continuous dimensional regressions against the Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS) and SWAN inventories, followed by 2x2 factorial ANCOVAs based on clinical diagnoses. Sensitivity analyses accounted for clinical collinearity, spatial outliers, and psychostimulant medication. Results: Dimensional models revealed that Pupil CV was significantly and uniquely associated with continuous autistic traits (q = 0.0043, joint model), exhibiting a strong statistical suppression effect when controlling for ADHD trait covariance. However, this pupillary biomarker lost significance in binary categorical models. Conversely, spatial gaze instability (BCEA) demonstrated robust categorical threshold effects; isolated ASD and ADHD diagnoses significantly impaired baseline gaze stability. Furthermore, comorbid ASD+ADHD produced a distinct, sub-additive interaction for BCEA (q = 0.005) that remained robust to extreme spatial outliers. Both physiological phenotypes were independent of active psychostimulant use. Conclusions: Pupillary dynamics and oculomotor stability associate with the ASD-ADHD spectrum through differing analytical patterns during resting states. Baseline autonomic volatility is more strongly captured by dimensional models of autistic trait severity, whereas baseline gaze instability is more clearly differentiated across categorical diagnostic groups, exhibiting a sub-additive interaction in comorbidity. Integrating both dimensional and categorical frameworks provides a more comprehensive understanding of these physiological variations, establishing a necessary foundation for future naturalistic and sensory-evoked research.
ASD (ORG) the Healthy Brain Network (ORG) the Bivariate Contour Ellipse Area (LOCATION) the Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS (ORG) SWAN (ORG) Pupil CV (PERSON) BCEA (ORG)
Originally published by bioRxiv Read original →