Title: Autism and the Brain
1Autism and the Brain
2Hello
- 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
3What 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?
4How 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
5How do we study the brain?
- fMRI brain scanners let us see which 'brain
areas' are active for different tasks
6Why 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?
7Differences 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
8Skills 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?
9The brain in autism
- We dont know much
- Brain looks the same
- Subtle differences in brain activity
10Research 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?
11Lauren MarshMirrors in the brain
12The 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
13Mirroring 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
14What 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.
15Studying the mirror system in autism
- Children with autism imitating goals
- Goals in the brain
16Study 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
17Goal directed imitation
18Goal 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
19Conclusions 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
20Study 2 Goals in the brain
- What is happening in the brain in autism?
21Typical mirror system
- Average brain activity of 20 undergraduate
students
22Outcomes 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?
23Recruiting!
- 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
24Emma Gowen
25Sensory experiences
- Sensory experiences
- Superior perceptual performance
- Visual search
- Hypersensitivity
26Sensory 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
27Motor difficulties
- Coordination of movements
- Clumsiness
- Balance, eye hand coordination
- Altered sensory-motor integration?
28Imitation copying someone else
Sensory Information (visual)
Motor system (controls movement)
Action performed
Sensory-motor integration is important for
imitation
29Manchester 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
30Questions?
- 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)
32Which is simpler?
33Not everything is different!
- People can guess other people's wealth / status
from a picture - People with autism can do this too