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Autism and the Brain

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Autism and the Brain * want to talk about why psychologists are interested in autism and why research in psychology might be interesting to people with autism * We ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Autism and the Brain


1
Autism and the Brain
2
Hello
  • Antonia Hamilton
  • Lecturer researcher in Psychology from the
    University of Nottingham
  • will give a general introduction
  • Lauren Marsh
  • research assistant from the University of
    Nottingham
  • will talk about one research project
  • Emma Gowen
  • Lecturer researcher in Psychology from
    Manchester University
  • will talk about autism research at Manchester

3
What do cognitive psychologists do?
  • How do we see, think, remember, feel, act?
  • How does the brain work?

The brain
see hear touch
perform actions
  • Why do different people do things differently?

4
How do we study the mind?
  • Use computer tasks see a picture, press a
    button. How fast are you?
  • Use memory tasks see a list of words, which
    ones do you remember?
  • Use action tasks how do you move your hands?
  • Use eye movement tasks which parts of a
    picture do you look at?
  • and more

5
How do we study the brain?
  • fMRI brain scanners let us see which 'brain
    areas' are active for different tasks

6
Why do psychologists study autism?
  • People with autism have a different way of
    understanding the world and interacting with the
    world
  • We want to know how why
  • So what do we know already?

7
Differences in social tasks
  • People with autism often have trouble in social
    situations
  • They may learn clever ways to compensate for this

Neurotypicals look at the eyes Autistic people
look at the mouth
8
Skills in autism
  • Some people with autism are exceptionally good at
    drawing or maths or music
  • Many are good at seeing things in detail

Does this triangle appear in this picture?
9
The brain in autism
  • We dont know much
  • Brain looks the same
  • Subtle differences in brain activity

10
Research questions
  • Why do autistic people find some social tasks so
    difficult?
  • How can neurotypicals learn to see in detail like
    autistic people?
  • Which parts of the brain are different in autism
    and why?
  • What else do you want to know?

11
Lauren MarshMirrors in the brain
12
The mirror system
  • A set of brain regions which respond when you
  • perform an action
  • see someone else acting
  • imitate an action
  • understand an action
  • Goals are critical for understanding

13
Mirroring for social interaction
  • Some researchers suggest that the mirror system
    is essential for social interaction
  • mirror systems let us imitate
  • they may contribute to language
  • and empathy
  • and other social skills

14
What is the broken mirror?
The mirror system might be abnormal in autism
because
  • children with autism dont imitate people much
  • some of the functions of the mirror system
    overlap with the difficulties seen in autism
  • language can develop slowly in children with
    autism

However, there is very little good evidence to
support this claim.
15
Studying the mirror system in autism
  1. Children with autism imitating goals
  2. Goals in the brain

16
Study 1 Goal directed imitation
  • 3-6 year olds imitate goals not means
  • Revealed by hand errors on cross-body trials
  • Good imitation on all other trials
  • Do children with ASD show the same pattern of
    errors?
  • Test 26 children with ASD and 25 typical children

Bekkering, et al, 2000 Gattis et al, 2002
17
Goal directed imitation
18
Goal directed imitation
4
asd
typically developing
2
hand errors
0
same side
cross body
both sides
  • Both groups replicate Bekkering et al
  • No problems with goals in children with ASD

19
Conclusions from study 1
  • Children with autism can imitate goals when
    explicitly asked to do so
  • This suggests they do NOT have a broken mirror
    system
  • This means that children with autism can learn
    through imitation, but we need to explicitly ask
    them to imitate us

20
Study 2 Goals in the brain
  • What is happening in the brain in autism?

21
Typical mirror system
  • Average brain activity of 20 undergraduate
    students

22
Outcomes from study 2
  • Does the mirror neuron system respond in the same
    way in people with autism?
  • If YES it is not broken. The theory is wrong.
  • If NO maybe it is broken. How can we fix it?

23
Recruiting!
  • We are currently looking for people aged 18-55
    with a diagnosis of autism, ASD or Aspergers to
    take part.
  • For more information, please contact me
  • lauren.marsh_at_nottingham.ac.uk
  • 0115 846 7920
  • www.AutismResearchNottingham.org

24
Emma Gowen
  • University of Manchester

25
Sensory experiences
  • Sensory experiences
  • Superior perceptual performance
  • Visual search
  • Hypersensitivity

26
Sensory integration
  • Altered sensory integration?

NEW RESULTS IN!!! Our results indicate that
people with ASD combine sensory stimuli even when
at different locations e.g. they over-integrate
27
Motor difficulties
  • Coordination of movements
  • Clumsiness
  • Balance, eye hand coordination
  • Altered sensory-motor integration?

28
Imitation copying someone else
Sensory Information (visual)
Motor system (controls movement)
Action performed
Sensory-motor integration is important for
imitation
29
Manchester Study
  • Imitation task how is imitation different in
    ASD?
  • Motion and eye tracking study
  • Volunteers needed
  • Formal diagnosis of high-functioning autism or
    Asperger syndrome
  • 18-45 years old
  • Generally healthy
  • Travel costs covered plus 20 for taking part

Contact Kelly Wild (0161 306 0470) Kelly.wild_at_man
chester.ac.uk
30
Questions?
  • What research would you like to see?
  • What do you need to know?
  • How can research help you?
  • Ask a question
  • Come to our stand and ask
  • Send us an email

31
(No Transcript)
32
Which is simpler?
33
Not everything is different!
  • People can guess other people's wealth / status
    from a picture
  • People with autism can do this too
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