3.1 Salience Anchoring and Internal Relevance
At the heart of Monotropic Expansion is the concept of anchoring: the internal selection of a salient detail that becomes the cognitive center of gravity. Neuroimaging studies suggest that this process may reflect differential activity in the default mode network (DMN) and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC)—regions associated with self-referential thought, internal narrative construction, and motivational salience.
Autistic individuals often show heightened activity or altered connectivity within these regions, particularly during rest or introspective tasks. This heightened activity directly contributes to the spontaneous emergence of internally anchored attention, where relevance is determined not by external prompts but by intrinsic salience cues. Anchoring, then, is not merely a preference—it is a neurologically supported mechanism that guides the direction of thought and shapes the subjective experience of internally driven focus.
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