Skip to main content

The social motivation theory of autism

Contested
Chevallier, Coralie, Kohls, Gregor, Troiani, Vanessa, Brodkin, Edward S, Schultz, Robert T 2012 Modern Era nonverbal

Plain English Summary

This influential 2012 paper laid out what became the dominant theory for understanding autism's social differences: the idea that autistic people are fundamentally less motivated by social interaction. The authors broke social motivation into three pieces — paying attention to social stuff (like faces), finding social interaction rewarding (both wanting it and enjoying it), and working to keep relationships going. They argued that reduced social motivation is a core feature of autism, not just a side effect, and that this drives the social-cognitive difficulties people observe. They pulled together behavioral evidence like reduced eye contact and less concern about reputation, plus brain science showing differences in reward circuits and the hormone oxytocin (a chemical linked to bonding and social connection). They also offered an evolutionary twist: the brain systems for wanting friends and social belonging are selectively disrupted in autism, while attachment to caregivers and romantic drives remain largely intact. Here is where it gets really interesting, though — even within this paper, the authors acknowledged something that later critics would seize on: when you boost autistic people's social attention, their social understanding actually improves quite a bit, suggesting the underlying ability is more intact than everyday behavior suggests. This paper became essential reading because later researchers directly challenged its central assumption — that less social behavior means less social desire — arguing that motor difficulties and sensory differences might better explain why autistic people interact differently.

Abstract

The idea that social motivation deficits play a central role in Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) has recently gained increased interest. This constitutes a shift in autism research, which has traditionally focused more intensely on cognitive impairments, such as theory-of-mind deficits or executive dysfunction, and has granted comparatively less attention to motivational factors. This review delineates the concept of social motivation and capitalizes on recent findings in several research areas to provide an integrated account of social motivation at the behavioral, biological and evolutionary levels. We conclude that ASD can be construed as an extreme case of diminished social motivation and, as such, provides a powerful model to understand humans' intrinsic drive to seek acceptance and avoid rejection.

Links

Related Papers

More in Nonverbal

📋 Cite this paper
APA
Chevallier, Coralie, Kohls, Gregor, Troiani, Vanessa, Brodkin, Edward S, Schultz, Robert T (2012). The social motivation theory of autism. Trends in Cognitive Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tics.2012.02.007
BibTeX
@article{chevallier_2012_social,
  title = {The social motivation theory of autism},
  author = {Chevallier, Coralie and Kohls, Gregor and Troiani, Vanessa and Brodkin, Edward S and Schultz, Robert T},
  year = {2012},
  journal = {Trends in Cognitive Sciences},
  doi = {10.1016/j.tics.2012.02.007},
}