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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: autism + brain + study  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 274 for autism brain study. (0.28 seconds) 
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That Happened!
Scans Show Sound-Processing Deficits in Autistic Kids
Washington Post, United States -
This signature of autism found in brain activity may eventually become a biomarker to improve classification of the disorder and aid in treatment and ...
Researchers say brain waves are window into autism language woes The Canadian Press
Brain's Magnetic Fields Reveal Language Delays in Autism MarketWatch
Brains of autistic slower to react to sounds: study Reuters India
That Happened! - TheMedGuru
all 128 news articles »
Study links brain waves to language problems in autistic children
SmartBrief, DC -
US researchers used magnetoencephalography to identify unique brain wave patterns in autistic children as they listened to a series of beeps. The study ...

dBTechno
Study Finds Brains Of Autistic Kids React Slower To Sounds
dBTechno, MA -
... study was to test out 30 autistic children ages 6 to 15. They had them listen to a variety of different sounds, and watched their brain impulses to see ...
Brain Waves Are Window Into Autism Language Woes
WBBM780, IL -
The authors of the study, whose conclusions are being announced today in Chicago, say autistic children seem to have a split-second delay in processing ...
Brains of autistic children slower at processing sound
New Scientist (subscription), UK - 30 minutes ago
"There could be abnormal routing or a lack of connectivity in the brain," he said. Autism is a spectrum of disorders that affects individuals to vastly ...

Chicago Daily Herald
Grant aims to help Alexian Brothers improve autism treatment
Chicago Daily Herald, IL -
Rather than both sides of the brain responding, one side may be kept out of the loop. People with autism disorders also often find certain noises to be too ...
Coping, Resilience, and Outcome
Am J Psychiatry (subscription) - 30 minutes ago
If there are several such common genetic variants involved in schizophrenia and still more in mood disorder, autism, and dementia, then one can quickly ...
Machine detects autistics' impairment
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA -
A split-second delay in the processing of sound and language by autistic children can be detected with a machine that measures magnetic fields in the brain, ...
Restoring GABAergic Signaling and Neuronal Synchrony in Schizophrenia
Am J Psychiatry (subscription) - 35 minutes ago
Given the evidence from postmortem brain studies that parvalbumin positive neurons are dysfunctional, Lewis and colleagues (1) hypothesized that enhanced ...
NEW STUDY - "Mitochondrial Autism" is Real; Vaccine Triggers ...
Huffington Post, NY - Nov 28, 2008
When I first reported this story, the researcher I spoke to told me there had been 30 children in the study, and two of them (8%) showed signs of brain ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: autism + brain + 0.29  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)


ABC News
Boston scientists find autism genes linked to learning
Boston Globe, United States - Jul 10, 2008
That led to their hypothesis that in autism, brain cells are unable to turn genes on to make new brain connections. "People have been studying the molecular ...
New hope for autism treatments from gene finds Telegraph.co.uk
Autism breakthrough as study identifies genetic defect link Times Online
Mental Activity May Affect Autism-Linked Genes Washington Post
Bloomberg - Reuters
all 319 news articles »
White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen helps unveil new school for ...
Chicago Tribune, United States -
... this is the first school for autism that was designed for kids with autism from the ground up," said Stephen Porges, director of the Brain-Body Center ...
Context And Personality Key In Understanding Responses To ...
Science Daily (press release) -
In a new brain imaging study Pascal Vrtička and colleagues at the Swiss National Center for Affective Sciences hosted by the University of Geneva found that ...
Noted autism expert leads conference at Melmark
Suburban and Wayne Times, PA -
... for adults and children with intellectual disabilities, acquired brain injuries, autism-spectrum disorders and other neurological and genetic disorders.
Are big brains to blame for schizophrenia?
New Scientist (subscription), UK -
The idea has been knocking around for some time now as an explanation for autism, depression and other diseases. It's an attractive thought. ...
The autism/vaccine controversy ...
Palm Beach Post,  United States - Aug 5, 2008
In older children, it can cause brain abnormalities. To a layperson, that might all sound like a clear-cut connection with autism, but to Peter Hotez, ...
The Brain Unmasked
MIT Technology Review, MA - Aug 5, 2008
Scientists also hope that the techniques will grant new insight into diseases linked to abnormal wiring, such as schizophrenia and autism. ...
Autism's Social Struggles Due To Disrupted Communication Networks ...
Science Daily (press release) - Jul 23, 2008
"The communication between the frontal and posterior areas of the social brain network is impaired in autism, making it difficult to understand the ...

Oneindia
Human-Frog Hybrids Used To Study Autism
Oneindia, India - Jul 25, 2008
With a view to determining whether abnormalities in neurotransmitter signalling also underlie autism, the researchers collected brain samples from six ...
Autism diagnosis shakes family
Billings Gazette,  USA - Aug 5, 2008
It is the result of a neurological disorder that affects the normal functioning of the brain, affecting development in the areas of social interaction and ...
Source: Google News

Inverse correlation between frontal lobe and cerebellum sizes in children with autism -
RA Carper, E Courchesne - Brain, 2000 - Oxford Univ Press
... VII was significantly smaller in patients with autism than in ... differences [all
|t(69)| 0.56; all P 0.29). ... for individual variation in overall brain size, we ...

Unusual brain growth patterns in early life in patients with autistic disorder An MRI study -
E Courchesne, CM Karns, HR Davis, R Ziccardi, RA … - Neurology, 2001 - AAN Enterprises
... boy in this age range exceeded the autism mean ... By contrast, among normal controls,
whole brain volumes were ... contributions to R 2 : linear age, 0.29; linear age ...

Atypical patterns of cerebral motor activation in autism: a functional magnetic resonance study -
RA M?ller, K Pierce, JB Ambrose, G Allen, E … - Biological Psychiatry, 2001 - Elsevier
... correlation coefficients were between 0.17 and 0.29 per axis and ... were temporally
more irregular in the autism group (mean ... atlas is derived from the brain of an ...

Functional connectivity in a baseline resting-state network in autism. -
VL Cherkassky, RK Kana, TA Keller, MA Just - NeuroReport, 2006 - neuroreport.com
... areas in the autism group [r=0.29, t(55 ... provide insight concerning an anatomical
basis of underconnectivity in autism. Group similarity in brain activation TOP. ...

Features of Autism in Rett Syndrome and Severe Mental Retardation -
RH Mount, T Charman, RP Hastings, S Reilly, H Cass - Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2003 - Springer
... and object use subscale 9.7 (5.7) 8.1 (5.3) 0.29 ... concerning differential diagnosis
between the Rett syndrome and autism. Brain and Development, 7, 281?289. ...

Forebrain Structure in Infantile Autism. -
GR GAFFNEY, S KUPERMAN, LY TSAI, S MINCHIN - Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent …, 1989 - jaacap.com
... 1.41) 1.34 ?0.24 (1.33) 3.05 ?0.52 (3.01) 2.92 ? 0.29 (2.88) 1.38 ... NP (1975), Pneumo-
graphic findings in the infantile autism syndrome. Brain, 98:667- 688 ...

Autism as a strongly genetic disorder: evidence from a British twin study. -
A Bailey, A Le Couteur, I Gottesman, P Bolton, E … - Psychological Medicine, 1995 - pt.wkhealth.com
... the highest anomaly score within each pair correlated -0.29 with gestational ... factors
that by themselves do not cause brain damage or autism, but which ...

Alleles of a reelin CGG repeat do not convey liability to autism in a sample from the CPEA network. -
B Devlin, P Bennett, G Dawson, DA Figlewicz, EL … - American Journal of Medical Genetics Part B, 2004 - doi.wiley.com
... was seen in our data (multiallelic: w 2 ? 1.35, DF?4, P?0.85; biallelic: z? 0.29,
P?0.78). ... A clinicopathological study of autism. Brain 121:889? 905. ...

Amygdalar Volume and Behavioral Development in Autism -
J Munson, G Dawson, R Abbott, S Faja, SJ Webb, SD … - Archives of General Psychiatry, 2006 - archpsyc.highwire.org
... in magnitude but fell just short of significance (r = 0.29; P = .06 ... Table 1. Pearson
Correlations Between Brain Volume and Sex, IQ, and Autism Symptoms at 3 ...
-

The 2nd to 4th digit ratio and autism -
JT Manning, S Baron-Cohen, S Wheelwright, G … - Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 2001 - Blackwell Synergy
... sib- lings the association was non-significant (b=0.29, F=1.91, p ... is therefore
compatible with the ?extreme male brain? theory of autism (Baron-Cohen ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Autism Affects Brain in Many Ways: Study

Autism affects many areas of the brain and causes a wide range of problems beyond impaired social interaction, concludes a U.S. study in the journal Child Neuropsychology.

U.S. researchers compared 56 children with autism and 56 children without the condition and found that the children with autism had much more difficulty with complex tasks, such as tying their shoelaces, BBC News reported.

Children with autism also had more problems with their handwriting and were less likely to be able to distinguish between similar-looking people. They also found it much harder to understand complex figures of speech.

 

According to the researchers, the findings suggest that autism affects sensory perception, memory and movement as it hinders the ability of different parts of the brain to work together to achieve complex tasks.

"These findings show that you cannot compartmentalize autism. It's much more complex," said lead researcher Nancy Minshew, a psychiatry and neurology expert at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

She said autism researchers shouldn't restrict their investigations to communication problems, repetitive behavior, or obsessive interests, BBC News reported.

"Our paper strongly suggests that autism is not primarily a disorder of social interaction but a global disorder affecting how the brain processes the information it receives -- especially when the information becomes complicated," Minshew said.

-----

Folding Picnic Tables Recalled

More than 200,000 folding picnic tables are being recalled because they can buckle or break without warning during use, the U.S Consumer Product Safety Commission says.

The distributor, Atico International USA Inc. of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., has received 26 reports of the tables collapsing. There have been 18 reports of injuries, including muscle strains and a broken foot.

 

The tables were made in China. They have a green plastic top, four green plastic seats that are attached to the table, and silver/steel aluminum legs. Affected model numbers are W50B2268 and W50H0284, which are printed on the packaging.

The tables were sold for $20 to $40 nationwide between January 2001 and December 2005.

Consumers with these tables should immediately stop using them and call Atico for return instructions. Contact the company toll-free at 1-877-546-4835 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. ET Monday through Friday.

-----

Average 2007 Medicare Monthly Drug Premium: $24

The average premium for Medicare prescription drug coverage next year will be about $24 a month, U.S. officials said.

That's about the same as this year and about 40 percent lower than first estimated for 2007, The New York Times reported.

Many Medicare drug plans currently charge less than $20 a month, with some as low as $1.87 a month. Others charge higher-than-average premiums, including one plan that costs more than $100 a month.

Beneficiaries favored low-cost plans and their choices, along with competition between the private insurers who deliver the drug benefit, had an effect on the average premium, The Times reported.

One expert noted that companies set their premiums low this year in order to attract large numbers of beneficiaries.

"Some plans decided to operate at cost, or below cost, to get a substantial share of the market. But plans cannot sustain that strategy and still make a profit," Babette Edgar, a consultant at the Gorman Health Group and a former Medicare official, told The Times.

It's not clear whether low premiums actually are a boon, noted a lawyer at the nonprofit Center for Medicare Advocacy, which counsels beneficiaries.

"We do not know enough to determine whether the low premiums in 2007 are good for beneficiaries. Plans may be keeping costs low by unduly restricting access to the drugs they cover," attorney Vicki Gottlich told The Times.

-----

Gerald Ford in Hospital for Tests

Former U.S. President Gerald Ford, 93, was admitted to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. on Tuesday for unspecified "testing and evaluation," says a statement released by his office.

The statement didn't offer any more information about why Ford is hospitalized, the Associated Press reported.

"No further releases or updates are anticipated prior to early next week," the statement said. A Mayo Clinic spokesman said he couldn't provide additional details.

Last month, shortness of breath led Ford to spend a few days in a Colorado hospital. In January, he was hospitalized for 12 days for pneumonia, the AP reported.

Ford is the oldest living former U.S. president.

-----

Weight Loss Worsens Cellulite in Some Women

Cellulite may actually become worse in some women after they lose weight, a U.S. study concludes.

Researchers from the American Society of Plastic Surgeons monitored a group of women who shed pounds in medically-supervised programs and found that slimmer women who lost little weight and had looser skin had worse cellulite at the end of the study, BBC News reported.

The average weight loss among women in the study was 30.5 pounds, ranging from 2.3 pounds to 102 pounds of weight loss.

Of the women, 17 had improvement in the appearance of cellulite, while nine found their cellulite became worse.

Those who showed the most improvement were those who lost the most weight and lowered their percentage of thigh fat, BBC News reported. These women had a higher body mass index (BMI) and more severe cellulite at the start of the study.

Women whose cellulite became worse had a much lower BMI at the start of the study, lost a smaller portion of their weight, had no change in the percentage of thigh fat, and their skin became much looser after they lost weight.

The study was published in the journal Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.

-----

U.S. Caesarean Rates on the Rise

More than a quarter of babies born each year in the United States are delivered by Caesarean section, says a report released Tuesday by the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

The analysis of 2003 data found that the use of C-section in the United States rose 38 percent since 1997, when about a fifth of babies were delivered that way.

Other findings:

  • There's been a 60 percent decline in the rate of women who give birth vaginally after they've had a previous child delivered via C-section.
  • The rate of repeat Caesareans has increased 33 percent.
  • In 2003, the total cost for childbirth in the United States was $34 billion. Hospital stays involving C-section delivery accounted for nearly half that amount -- $15 billion.
  • Medicaid was billed for 43 percent of childbirths overall and 41 percent of C-section deliveries.
 
 
 
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