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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: another piece + puzzle piece + autism  Related to the article below (Last Update: 7/1/2008)

Alex Byers: Say it ain't so, Joe
GW Hatchet (subscription), DC - Jun 14, 2008
You wear that blue puzzle piece on your lapel each time you step on the hardwood to show your support, and you've always said if you ever left GW, ...
March against vaccines for autistic kids
13abc.com, OH - Jun 4, 2008
Researchers from the Centers for Disease control may have found another piece to the autism puzzle. In a study published in this month's journal "Pediatrics ...
Dover International Speedway raises $76000 for Autism Speaks
Scene Daily (subscription), NC - Jun 1, 2008
Tissot, another track partner, painted Autism Speaks puzzle pieces on their signage at the start/finish line as well to help raise awareness. ...
New Rochester business rents out toys
Post-Bulletin, MN - Jun 5, 2008
Jeff Raschka says that is still the long-term goal and this new rental program is another piece to hopefully strengthen the overall concept and make that ...

Edmonton Journal
Ralph returns a happy camper
Edmonton Journal, Canada - Jun 12, 2008
... Hamilton in the deal that brought offensive lineman Dan Comiskey and tailback Troy Davis to Edmonton as final pieces of another winning Grey Cup puzzle. ...
Briefly, April 11
Times Record News, TX - Apr 11, 2008
ARC of Wichita County and Families for Autism Support of Texoma will present a program titled ?Picking up the Pieces of the Autism Puzzle? from 9 am to 3 pm ...
Source: Google News

[CITATION] Facial Perception in Autism -
FR Volkmar, SS Sparrow, RD Rende, DJ Cohen - Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 1989 - Blackwell Synergy
... pieces sd ... could be viewed as a function of complexity of the puzzle and the ... Similarly,
different results might well be observed if another method of stimulus ...

Sensorimotor functioning and communication in mute autistic children -
F Curcio - Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 1978 - Springer
Journal of Autism and Childhood Schizophrenia, VoL 8, No. ... in one session it was
readministered in another session. ... in the form of food, puzzle pieces, and/or ...

[CITATION] Are jigsaw puzzle skillsspared'in persons with Prader-Willi syndrome? -
EM Dykens - JOURNAL OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY, 2002 - Blackwell Synergy
... various disorders ? from Williams syndrome to autism ? lead to ... Willi syndrome appears
to be another disorder with ... Solving a 6-piece puzzle is cast at the 4 ...

[CITATION] Joint attention and symbolic play in young children with autism: a randomized controlled … -
C Kasari, S Freeman, T Paparella - Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2006 - Blackwell Synergy
... Another interpretation concerns the nature of the skills being taught. ... to their
presentation configuration (eg, puts puzzle pieces into puzzle; nests the ...

A test of central coherence theory: Can adults with high-functioning autism or Asperger syndrome … -
T Jolliffe, S Baron-Cohen - Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 2001 - ingentaconnect.com
... into pieces and arranged in a puzzle-like fashion ... manner will interpret that one
piece without attending ... In contrast, another adult with high functioning autism ...

Task-related social behavior in children with Down syndrome -
C Kasari, SFN Freeman - American Journal on Mental Retardation, 2001 - aamr.allenpress.com
... used by Dweck and colleagues, two of the puzzles were altered by substituting 6
pieces of each puzzle with 6 pieces from another very similar puzzle ...

[CITATION] A MARATHON BEHAVIOUR MODIFICATION OF A SELECTIVELY MUTE CHILD
JB Reid, N Hawkins, C Keutzer, SA McNeal, RE … - Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 1967 - Blackwell Synergy
... made increasingly difficult demands on her, asking her to name parts and describe
pieces of the puzzle. ... Another E entered, but Sally did not stop responding ...

[CITATION] Impulse Control, Structure, and the Synthetic Function
SL LUSTMAN - Psychoanalysis: A General Psychology, 1966 - Imprint unknown

[RTF] Mirror neurons and imitation learning as the driving force behind the great leap forward in human …
VS Ramachandran - Edge Website article http://www. edge. org/3rd_culture/ …, 2000 - static.userland.com
... (another important piece of the puzzle is Rizzolatti's observation that the ventral
pre-motor area may be a homologue of the "Broca's area" -- a ...

[PDF] Emergence of mands and tacts of novel objects among preschool children
AI Petursdottir, JE Carr, J Michael - The Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2005 - homepages.wmich.edu
... with a nonspecific mand (?I need another piece.?) on all ... prompt to mand for a specific
piece, did not ... not maintained following mand training on the puzzle. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Finding Adds Another Piece to Autism Puzzle

 

 

MONDAY, Aug. 21 (HealthDay News) -- Contrary to common medical thought, young children with autism do not have accelerated brain growth even though their brains appear enlarged, new research claims.

The finding, published in the Aug. 22 issue of Neurology, confirms some earlier reports and conflicts with others.

Dr. Stephen Dager, of the University of Washington School of Medicine, and his colleagues compared 60 autistic children to 16 children with developmental delay and 10 children with typical development. They used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans to measure the transverse relaxation (T2) of gray and white matter in the children's cortexes. This measures how much water is moving around inside brain tissue, and it gives clinicians an indirect way to measure brain maturation.

The researchers found the autistic children had differences in the gray matter of their brains compared to the children with typical development. A number of studies has suggested the brains of younger children with autism are 10 percent larger, Dager explained. This new research honed in on tissue chemistry and found the abnormality wasn't due to lack of "pruning," which is how the normal developing brain rids itself of unnecessary neurons.

The abnormality is "clearly not accelerated brain growth. An alternative hypothesis could be inflammatory processes. Our data would be consistent with adult studies that found higher levels of cytokines, associated with inflammation, in postmortem studies," he explained.

A popular current theory is that autistic children have more rapid brain growth that plateaus at the age of 5 or 6. "We didn't find evidence for that, just the opposite, in fact," Dager said. "The processes that go along with brain maturation were slower in the autistic brains, particularly in gray matter."

The finding is "tantalizing," said Andrew Shih, director of research and programs at the National Alliance for Autism Research. "This is one of the first attempts to differentiate beyond volumetric difference to really look at what's behind those differences."

The field, he explained, has been "intrigued by reports last year that suggest a model of autism could be premature development or unchecked brain growth leading to disorganized circuitry. The thinking was, synaptic pruning didn't occur, so that noise became predominant over signal itself."

But Dager's study suggests gray matter development in autism involves the same volume as normal brains, but fewer neurons. "The convergence of evidence now seems to suggest a model in which gray matter abnormality could be inflammatory. T2 measures water molecules, and the findings here suggest there's more water in these kids' brains...," Shih explained.

The differences in gray matter were found only in the brains of autistic children, while both gray and white matter differences were found in the brains of children with learning delays. For children with learning delays, the findings suggest slowed neuronal development is to blame, while autistic children have a different kind of neuronal development abnormality, possibly induced by inflammation. Gray matter consists of the brain's neurons, while white matter is the brain's wiring system.

Another important finding, that gray matter seems to be affected differently in autism, supports earlier research. "There's evidence of connectivity problems at older ages; in younger ages, it seems gray matter is problematic. Autism is a developmental problem and evolves as people age," he noted.

Autism affects up to one in every 175 school-age children, according to a recent study from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The government researchers also found that boys are nearly four times more likely to be diagnosed with autism than girls, and Hispanic parents were slightly less likely than non-Hispanic whites to report a child with autism, although this may be due to cultural or other factors, including access to medical care.

In the end, the findings only add another piece to the jigsaw puzzle that is autism, Dager said, adding, "We're no closer to a treatment."

Other new research is also starting to unravel common beliefs about this disorder. In addition to social interaction problems, a study in the current issue of Child Neuropsychology found autism prevents different parts of the brain from working together. That makes complex tasks, such as tying shoelaces, much more difficult. The children studied were 8 to 15 years old.

More information

For more information on autism, go to National Institute of Mental Health.

 
 
 
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