Previous View Held Autism Limited to Communication, Social Behavior, and Reasoning
A recent study provides evidence that autism affects the functioning of virtually
the entire brain, and is not limited to the brain areas involved with social
interactions, communication behaviors, and reasoning abilities, as had been previously
thought. The study, conducted by scientists in a research network supported by
the National Institutes of Health (NIH), found that autism also affects a broad
array of skills and abilities, including those involved with sensory perception,
movement, and memory.
The findings, appearing in the August Child Neuropsychology, strongly
suggest that autism is a disorder in which the various parts of the brain have
difficulty working together to accomplish complex tasks.
The study was conducted by researchers in the Collaborative Program of Excellence
in Autism (CPEA), a research network funded by two components of the NIH, the
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the National Institute
on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.
?These findings suggest that further understanding of autism will likely come
not from the study of factors affecting one brain area or system, but from studying
factors affecting many systems,? said the director of NICHD, Duane Alexander,
M.D.
People with autism tend to display 3 characteristic behaviors, which are the
basis of the diagnosis of autism, explained the study?s senior author, Nancy
Minshew, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry and Neurology at the University of Pittsburgh
School of Medicine. These behaviors involve difficulty interacting socially,
problems with verbal and non-verbal communications, and repetitive behaviors
or narrow, obsessive interests. Traditionally, Dr. Minshew said, researchers
studying autism have concentrated on these behavioral areas.
Within the last 20 years, however, researchers began studying other aspects
of thinking and brain functioning in autism, discovering that people with autism
have difficulty in many other areas, including balance, movement, memory, and
visual perception skills.
In the current study, Dr. Minshew and her colleagues administered a comprehensive
array of neuropsychological tests to a group of children with autism. The researchers
tested 56 autistic children, and compared their responses to those of 56 children
who did not have autism. The children with autism were classified as having higher
functioning autism — an I.Q. of 80 or above, and the ability to speak, read, and
write. All of the children in the study ranged in age from 8 to 15 years. The
purpose of the test array, Dr. Minshew said, was to determine whether there were
any patterns in mental functioning unique to autism.
?We set out to find commonalities across a broad range of measures, so that
we could make inferences about what?s going on in the brain,? Dr. Minshew said.