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Basic InformationMore InformationLatest NewsKids With Autism May Perceive Movement More QuicklyKelly the Robot Helps Kids Tackle AutismGirls With Autism May Need Different Treatments Than BoysStudy Debunks Lyme Disease-Autism LinkNewborn's Placenta May Predict Autism Risk, Study SuggestsThe 'Learning Curve' of Living With Asperger'sGuideline Changes Have Asperger's Community on EdgeAge of Autism Diagnosis May Depend on Symptoms: StudyKids With Autism May Be Less Likely to Imitate 'Silly' BehaviorAnother Study Sees No Vaccine-Autism LinkSuicidal Thoughts More Common in Kids With Autism: StudyWomen Abused in Childhood at Higher Odds of Having Child With Autism: StudyHaving Older Grandfather May Raise Child's Autism Risk: StudyOne in 50 School-Aged Children in U.S. Has Autism: CDCBrain Circuitry Yields Clue to Autism, Researchers SayMost Kids With Autism Overcome Language Delays, Study FindsBrain Connections Differ in Children With AutismCan Therapy Dogs Help Kids With Autism?Researchers Detect an Anti-Autism Advantage in FemalesFolic Acid in Pregnancy May Lower Autism RiskDon't Overlook Eating Issues Tied to Autism, Study WarnsInfants' Inattentiveness Might Signal Later Autism, Study SaysFor Some Children, Autism Symptoms May Fade With AgeResearchers Link 25 New Gene Variants to AutismBullying Harms Kids With Autism, Parents SayExposure to Traffic-Related Air Pollution Linked to AutismGenes Linked to Autism Seem to Have Strong Tendency to MutateAsperger's, Autism Not Linked to Violence: ExpertsAdults With Autism Report Worse Health Care ExperiencesGene Study Uncovers More Autism CluesCommon Heart Drug Might Dampen Some Autism SymptomsKids With Autism Common Users of ERs, Study SaysBrain Differences Observed in Young Men With AutismStudy Sees Possible Link Between Air Pollution and Autism RiskChild Prodigies Show Links with AutismStudy Looks at Autism and Possible Pregnancy Risk FactorsPlay-Focused Program Might Help Kids With AutismAutism Tough to Spot Before 6 Months of Age, Study SuggestsKids With Autism Find It Hard to Describe Poor Behavior, Study FindsCould Stem Cells Treat Autism? Newly Approved Study May TellNearly Half of Children With Autism Wander From Safety: SurveyNew Autism Criteria Will Have Minor Impact: StudyMany Children With Autism Have Other Health Problems, Study SaysResearch Lacking on Drugs for Older Children With Autism, Study FindsDrug Shows Promise Against Fragile X Syndrome, Possibly AutismAlmost Half of U.S. Kids With Autism Have Been BulliedLittle Evidence on Value of Treatments for Autism: ReportOlder Dads May Raise Risk for Autism, Schizophrenia in KidsPets May Help Kids With Autism Develop Social SkillsFamily History of Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder May Up Kids' Risk for Autism Links |
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Mirror NeuronsTammi Reynolds, BA & Mark Dombeck, Ph.D.Mirror Neurons
Recently, neuroimaging studies have helped reveal a specific and significant set of abnormalities present in the brain with autism. A system of "mirror neurons" located in various parts of human and animal brains have been identified that become activated equally well when people do something such as wave their hand or smile, and when they simply observe those things being done. Because mirror neurons do not discriminate between performed and viewed actions, they are very likely the neurological means through which animals (including people) are able to recognize the intentions of other animals. For example, a set of mirror neurons will activate when you smile, and also when you observe someone else smiling. The fact that the mirror neurons fire when you observe someone else smiling helps you to relate what you are seeing to your own experience of smiling, and thus you are able to infer what the other person is likely to be feeling when they smile at you. Mirror neurons are likely to be the basis for people's instinctual ability to recognize emotions from facial expressions, and perhaps even more significantly, to imitate and match those expressions. They are perhaps in some fundamental way, the neurological foundation for communication.
People with autism's mirror neuron systems appear to be less active than people without autism's mirror neuron systems. This relative lack of mirror neuron activity appears to impair people with autism's ability to automatically and instinctually intuit what other people are feeling, and to imitate them. For example, people with autism's mirror neurons were found to be less active than were people without autism's when both watched an image of a hand waving on a video screen. In another study focused on mirror neuron reactions to facial emotion, people without autism's mirror neuron systems and also their limbic systems (brain parts most responsible for emotion) became activated when they viewed pictures of people's emotional facial expressions. In contrast, people with autism's mirror neuron systems did not activate as strongly, and they did not show limbic activation either, suggesting that they did not pick up the emotional content of what they were seeing. Research on mirror neuron systems' impact on autistic social functioning is only just beginning. It is not possible to say that mirror neuron system dysfunction is the 'cause' of people with autism's problems at this time, but it certainly appears that mirror neurons play an important role in creating autistic problems. As is usually the case, more research is necessary, and time will tell.
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