This cluster looks at how kids and adults with autism look at faces and feelings. Scientists use eye cameras and brain tests to see that autistic people move their eyes differently on happy, sad, or moving faces. They often look more at mouths than eyes and need extra time to understand what a face shows. A BCBA can use these facts to slow down social-skills videos, add gaze games, and teach each feeling one at a time.
This cluster contains 66 research articles. Editorial content is being generated — check back soon for a full synthesis, key findings, and practitioner guide.