Autism: New Clue to Earlier Detection

March 30, 2009

Bookmark and Share
Researchers Find Autism Attention Difference That May Start Very Early, Which May Lead to Earlier Detection and New Therapies

WASHINGTON, DC (RPRN) 03/30/09-- A surprise discovery is leading autism researchers at Yale University toward earlier detection and new therapies for children with autism -- possibly beginning in infancy. That discovery is all about key differences in what captures the attention of children with autism compared to other kids.

Those differences are in place by the time kids are 2 years old and may start much younger, note the scientists, who included Ami Klin, PhD, and Warren Jones, PhD, of the Yale Child Study Center.

"We know that the earlier we are able to detect autism and intervene, the more likely we are to optimize the child's outcome," Klin tells WebMD by email. "Our hope is to detect vulnerabilities for autism as early as possible, so as to intervene with the hope to capitalize on the babies' brain malleability."
Lavalife: Where Singles Click!



Thomas Insel, MD, director of the National Institute of Mental Health (which funded the new study), agrees.

"For the first time, this study has pinpointed what grabs the attention of toddlers with ASDs [ autism spectrum disorders]," Insel says in a news release. "In addition to the potential uses in screening for early diagnosis, this line of research holds promise for the development of new therapies based on redirecting visual attention in children with these disorders."

New Autism Study


The new study was inspired by a 15-month-old girl with autism who puzzled Klin and Jones.

Klin and Jones showed the girl videos of an adult, shown as a stick figure outlined by points of light on his body, moving around and talking. In some of the videos, the figure was right-side-up; in other videos, the image was upside down.

The little girl wasn't all that interested in either video -- until the figure started clapping his hands while singing the "pat-a-cake" nursery rhyme. That caught her attention.

New Autism Study


Klin, Jones, and colleagues have a grant to study how early in life those attention differences start and whether those patterns can be altered.

Meanwhile, Klin has a message for families of autistic children.

"I have 20 years serving children with autism and their families, and their well-being is all that matters," Klin tells WebMD.

"There is nothing in our research that in any way conveys a sense that children [with autism] are any less human, any less deserving of our love and respect, or any less of anything at all. It is that the way they seem to learn about this world is rather different than the strategies used by their peers. By better understanding how they do this, the better we will be able to reach them, and like in any personal relationship, the better they will be able to reach us. ... Their different perspective might give us solutions that others, with the typical mind and brain, might never see."

At first, Klin and Jones weren't sure what was going on. Then, after checking their data, they realized that the girl was more interested in audio-visual synchronicity -- the figure moving in time with the clapping -- than in the figure's other movements.

In new experiments, the researchers studied a larger group of 2-year-olds with autism, as well as typically developing kids and children with developmental disabilities other than autism.

Once again, the autistic children showed a preference for audio-visual synchronicity in the "pat-a-cake" videos, while the other children were more interested in the figure's movements regardless of audio-visual synchronicity.

That pattern could be a clue about brain development and early signs of autism.

Klin explains that within a few days after birth, typically developing children prefer watching biological motion -- the movement of living beings, such as their parents -- and that preference is an important survival skill and a building block for relationships.

But Klin's group found that autistic children were more interested in "nonsocial contingencies," which are synchronicities that don't have any social meaning -- like two balls colliding and making a sound, or a stone falling when someone drops it.

SOURCE WEB MD NEWS

Click here to see all news from this author/company
Bookmark and Share
About the author:

RushPR News is a social media newswire service created to help you with content creation and distribution to news outlets and social media networks. RushPRnews can also assist you with your web strategies with experts advices and strategies at an affordable cost. Write us at news@rushprnews.com

Filed Under: Health and Fitness, Lifestyle, Article-byline

RUSH PR NEWS newswire and press release services at rushprnews.com / Anne Howard annehowardpublicist.com

Content- Legal Responsibility - All material is copyrighted - You may repost but you MUST link back to the original post on your page and acknowledge Rush PR News as the news source. Rush PR News is not legally and/or morally responsible for content of press releases, opinions expressed or fact-checking.

Rush PR News cannot be held legally responsible for material published and distributed through its newswire service or published in its press-room and therefore cannot be sued for published material. Third-party must be contacted directly to dispute content.

Rush PR News is not the contact for material published.

Please leave your comments here

RSSFeed PRESS & SOCIAL MEDIA RELEASES

BOB BARKER TO STAMPEDE SPONSORS: NO PRICE IS RIGHT FOR ANIMAL CRUELTY

NORFOLK, VA 02/09/12 · TV Icon Joins PETA in Urging Companies to...

MASTECTOMY LINGERIE & MORE celebrates new online mastectomy shop

Hamilton, ON 02/09/12 · MASTECTOMY LINGERIE & MORE celebrates new online mastectomy...

Latest DiscountVouchers.co.uk Research Shines Light on UK Spending Habits

London, UK 02/08/12 · A new survey conducted by leading money-saving website...

Aysling Launches Digital Publishing Webinar Series for iPad, Tablet and Mobile markets

ANN ARBOR, Mich. 02/08/12 · Aysling Launches Digital Publishing Webinar Series for iPad,...

Weber Shandwick Hires Bradford Williams to Lead North American Technology Practice

SAN FRANCISCO 02/07/12 ·  – Weber Shandwick, one of the world's...

Comparecarhire.co.uk Sees Leap in Sunshine Destination Rental Bookings for Half Term

Gloucester, UK 02/07/12 · Internet-based car hire specialist reports UK tourists looking...

DiscountVouchers.co.uk New Deals Offer Savings at Top UK Fashion Stores

London, UK 02/06/12 · Online vouchers specialist offering savings on clothing from...

Global Connect Releases New Features for GC1 Peak Dialer

Mays Landing, NJ 02/06/12 · GC1’s feature-rich cloud-based dialer now offers Call Blending, Call...

Futureproof Solutions for Sheltered Housing

Yorkshire, UK 02/03/12 · Levi Court is a sheltered housing scheme managed...

A Unique Dating Site for Baby Boomers Has Launched

Saint Louis, Missouri 02/02/12 · VanWoody Enterprises Announces New Adult Dating Site -...

Not enough businesses are utilizing their existing customer base to improve their offering, warns Cint

Los Angeles, CA 02/02/12 · The on-going uncertainty in economies spanning the globe...

Media Alert: Facebook Credits represented 15% of Facebook's 2011

Denver, CO 02/02/12 · Facebook Files IPO: Peter Vogel, Co-Founder of Facebook...

Latest DiscountVouchers.co.uk Survey Reveals That Flowers Still Top Romantic Gift Charts

London, UK 02/01/12 · DiscountVouchers.co.uk, the leading online retail voucher codes specialist,...