AI Article Synopsis

  • Autism spectrum disorder affects approximately 1 in 166 individuals, characterized by atypical social interaction, communication issues, and repetitive behaviors, while sometimes showcasing enhanced perceptual abilities.
  • Research shows structural brain differences in individuals with autism, such as increased total brain volume and inconsistent gray/white matter variations, potentially due to differing diagnostic criteria and participant characteristics.
  • Using advanced MRI techniques, a study found specific regional brain differences linked to social cognition and perception in young adults with high-functioning autism, providing new insights into the neuroanatomy associated with their unique perceptual capabilities.

Article Abstract

Autism spectrum disorder is a complex neurodevelopmental variant thought to affect 1 in 166 [Fombonne (2003): J Autism Dev Disord 33:365-382]. Individuals with autism demonstrate atypical social interaction, communication, and repetitive behaviors, but can also present enhanced abilities, particularly in auditory and visual perception and nonverbal reasoning. Structural brain differences have been reported in autism, in terms of increased total brain volume (particularly in young children with autism), and regional gray/white matter differences in both adults and children with autism, but the reports are inconsistent [Amaral et al. (2008): Trends Neurosci 31:137-145]. These inconsistencies may be due to differences in diagnostic/inclusion criteria, and age and Intelligence Quotient of participants. Here, for the first time, we used two complementary magnetic resonance imaging techniques, cortical thickness analyses, and voxel-based morphometry (VBM), to investigate the neuroanatomical differences between a homogenous group of young adults with autism of average intelligence but delayed or atypical language development (often referred to as "high-functioning autism"), relative to a closely matched group of typically developing controls. The cortical thickness and VBM techniques both revealed regional structural brain differences (mostly in terms of gray matter increases) in brain areas implicated in social cognition, communication, and repetitive behaviors, and thus in each of the core atypical features of autism. Gray matter increases were also found in auditory and visual primary and associative perceptual areas. We interpret these results as the first structural brain correlates of atypical auditory and visual perception in autism, in support of the enhanced perceptual functioning model [Mottron et al. (2006): J Autism Dev Disord 36:27-43].

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6870833PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hbm.20887DOI Listing

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