

While the children were in the scanner, researchers played a repeating tape of a female voice reading a bedtime story and the scanner recorded the children's brain activity. The study suggests that autistic children as young as 14 months use different brain regions than youngsters with more typical development when hearing these stories.
This research "Is going to tell us an awful lot about how the brain goes wrong in the first place and then gives us insight into how we'll be able to help at an earlier age," says Dr. Courchesne,"
In one of my previous posts, entitled Red Flag Signs of Autism, the symptoms in the category Communication problems and Social problems show failure of language comprehension is a "red flag" for babies with autism.
It is known that the left side of the brain usually deals with the understanding of the meaning of words and that the right side helps to understand the social context of the language, like how the person speaking feels (angry, scared, happy…) when saying the words.

During the tests it was shown that the use of the right brain was far stronger in babies and children showing signs of autism spectrum disorders. Dr. Courchesne says: “One theory is that in autism, the right side is needed to learn the basic definitions of words, crowding out the ability to develop skills to process more social, nuanced aspects of language”.
Along with Dr. Courchesne, the UCSD Autism Center of Excellence brings together the expertise of over 40 scientists working collaboratively to discover a bio-behavioral “fingerprint” of what autism looks like in babies at 12-months.
As director of the UCSD Autism Center’s MRI Project on early brain development in autism, Dr. Courchesne’s efforts have produced new information about the structural, functional and genetic bases of this disorder.
Autism remains a behaviorally defined disorder and as such, is generally not diagnosed until age 3. Hopefully studies like this one will soon result in earlier diagnoses, earlier treatment and a significant reduction in symptoms for affected children.
What were the first symptoms of autism you noticed in a child close to you?
I read on your site that you are from Ottawa? Is there a retailer in town? I'd love to get some of your heart chews for my daughter.
ReplyDeleteWe are near Halifax, Nova Scotia. Both our youngest daughters have the same name :)There are no retailers in Ottawa, but you can find some here: http://www.chewelry.ca/locations.html
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