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Dive into the research topics where Emma Chapman is active.

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Featured researches published by Emma Chapman.


Social Neuroscience | 2006

Fetal testosterone and empathy: Evidence from the Empathy Quotient (EQ) and the “Reading the Mind in the Eyes” Test

Emma Chapman; Simon Baron-Cohen; Bonnie Auyeung; Rebecca C. Knickmeyer; Kevin Taylor; Gerald Hackett

Abstract Empathy involves an understanding of what others are thinking and feeling, and enables us to interact in the social world. According to the Empathizing–Systemizing (E–S) theory, females on average have a stronger drive to empathize than males. This sex difference may in part reflect developmental differences in brain structure and function, which are themselves under the influence of fetal testosterone (fT). Previous studies have found that fT is inversely correlated with social behaviors such as eye contact in infancy, peer relationships in preschoolers, and mentalistic interpretation of animate motion. Male fetuses are exposed to higher levels of testosterone than are female fetuses. The present study investigates empathizing in children, as a function of amniotic measures of fT. One hundred ninety-three mothers of children (100 males, 93 females) aged 6–8 years of age completed childrens versions of the Empathy Quotient (EQ-C), and the children themselves were tested on “Reading the Mind in the Eyes” Task (Eyes-C). All mothers had had amniocentesis during the 2nd trimester of pregnancy. There was a significant negative correlation between fT and scores on both measures. While empathy may be influenced by post-natal experience, these results suggest that pre-natal biology also plays an important role, mediated by androgen effects in the brain. These results also have implications for the causes of disabilities involving empathy, such as autism spectrum conditions, and may explain the increased rate of such conditions among males.


Social Neuroscience | 2006

Impaired recognition of negative basic emotions in autism: A test of the amygdala theory

Chris Ashwin; Emma Chapman; Livia Colle; Simon Baron-Cohen

Abstract Autism and Asperger Syndrome are autism spectrum conditions (ASC) characterized by deficits in understanding others’ minds, an aspect of which involves recognizing emotional expressions. This is thought to be related to atypical function and structure of the amygdala, and performance by people with ASC on emotion recognition tasks resembles that seen in people with acquired amygdala damage. In general, emotion recognition findings in ASC have been inconsistent, which may reflect low numbers of participants, low numbers of stimuli and trials, heterogeneity of symptom severity within ASC groups, and ceiling effects on some tasks. The present study tested 39 male adults with ASC and 39 typical male controls on a task of basic emotion recognition from photographs, in two separate experiments. On a control face discrimination task the group with ASC were not impaired. People with ASC were less accurate on the emotion recognition task compared to controls, but only for the negative basic emotions. This is discussed in the light of similar findings from people with damage to the amygdala.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2014

Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder Show a Circumspect Reasoning Bias Rather than "Jumping-to-Conclusions".

Mark Brosnan; Emma Chapman; Chris Ashwin

People with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) often take longer to make decisions. The Autism-Psychosis Model proposes that people with autism and psychosis show the opposite pattern of results on cognitive tasks. As those with psychosis show a jump-to-conclusions reasoning bias, those with ASD should show a circumspect reasoning bias. Jumping-to-conclusions was assessed in a sample of 20 adolescents with ASD and 23 age-matched controls using the jumping-to-conclusions beads task. Both groups demonstrated equivalent levels of confidence in decision-making, however the ASD group required more beads than controls before making their decision. Furthermore, there was a positive correlation between the beads required and degree of autism symptoms. Consistent with the Autism-Psychosis Model, a more circumspect reasoning bias was evident in ASD.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2015

Emotion Recognition in Animated Compared to Human Stimuli in Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Mark Brosnan; Hilary Johnson; Beate Grawmeyer; Emma Chapman; L. Benton

There is equivocal evidence as to whether there is a deficit in recognising emotional expressions in Autism spectrum disorder (ASD). This study compared emotion recognition in ASD in three types of emotion expression media (still image, dynamic image, auditory) across human stimuli (e.g. photo of a human face) and animated stimuli (e.g. cartoon face). Participants were 37 adolescents (age 11–16) with a diagnosis of ASD (33 male, 4 female). 42 males and 39 females served as typically developing, age-matched controls. Overall there was significant advantage for control groups over the ASD group for emotion recognition in human stimuli but not animated stimuli, across modalities. For static animated images specifically, those with ASD significantly outperformed controls. The findings are consistent with the ASD group using atypical explicit strategies.


Autism | 2016

Deficits in metacognitive monitoring in mathematics assessments in learners with autism spectrum disorder

Mark Brosnan; Hilary Johnson; Beate Grawemeyer; Emma Chapman; Konstantina Antoniadou; Melissa Hollinworth

Children and adults with autism spectrum disorder have been found to have deficits in metacognition that could impact upon their learning. This study explored metacognitive monitoring in 28 (23 males and 5 females) participants with autism spectrum disorder and 56 (16 males and 40 females) typically developing controls who were being educated at the same level. Participants were asked a series of mathematics questions. Based upon previous research, after each question they were asked two metacognitive questions: (1) whether they thought they had got the answer correct or not (or ‘don’t know’) and (2) whether they meant to get the answer correct or not (or ‘don’t know’). Participants with autism spectrum disorder were significantly more likely than the typically developing group to erroneously think that they had got an incorrect answer correct. Having made an error, those with autism spectrum disorder were also significantly more likely to report that they had meant to make the error. Different patterns in the types of errors made were also identified between the two groups. Deficits in metacognition were identified for the autism spectrum disorder group in the learning of mathematics. This is consistent with metacognitive research from different contexts and the implications for supporting learning in autism spectrum disorder are discussed.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2006

Foetal testosterone and the child systemizing quotient

Bonnie Auyeung; Simon Baron-Cohen; Emma Chapman; Rebecca Knickmeyer; Kevin Taylor; Gerald Hackett


Psychologist | 2007

Transported to a world of emotion

Simon Baron-Cohen; Ofer Golan; Emma Chapman; Yael Granader


Molecular Autism | 2014

Enhanced olfactory sensitivity in autism spectrum conditions

Chris Ashwin; Emma Chapman; Jessica Howells; Danielle Rhydderch; Ian Walker; Simon Baron-Cohen


McGill Journal of Medicine | 2009

Transported to a World of Emotion

Simon Baron-Cohen; Ofer Golan; Emma Chapman; Yael Granader


IMFAR, 2013 | 2013

Representing emotion in a mathematics tutor designed for people with ASD for people with ASD

Mark Brosnan; Emma Chapman; Hilary Johnson; Beate Grawemeyer; L. Benton

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Kevin Taylor

University of Cambridge

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