Category Archives: Science & Research

New Wearable Detects Meltdowns Before They Happen

A new wristband may give autistic people and our caregivers warning that a meltdown is coming up to three minutes before they happen. A version of the wristband is already FDA approved and on the market to help detect seizures. Dr. Rosalind Picard of MIT presented the results on Friday at the 2018 International Society for Autism Research annual meeting in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. ­­ During her keynote, Dr. Picard emphasized the importance of looking beyond neurotypical facial expressions and cues to determine how autistic people feel. Dr. Picard began her keynote by stressing the importance of autistic feedback in her work. She recalled an autistic friend's observation that “my biggest problem is not understanding the emotions of others. My biggest problem is you are not understanding my emotions.” Alexithymia, or difficulty understanding how one feels, is a common problem in the autistic community. This can often lead to situations in which someone does not notice … Continue Reading ››

New Study on Autism and Aggression Misses the Point

There is a new study in the latest issue of the journal Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders on a correlation between autism, brain volume and aggression.   The team of researchers from Brigham Young University studied structural MRI data from the brains of 45 Autistic boys and 18 non-autistic boys to see if the brains did similar things or different things in the presence of “aggressive behavior.” Autistics who had been reported as exhibiting so-called “problematic aggression” had smaller brain stems and did not show the non-autistic tendency of structural differences in the brain structures linked to emotions and behavior. The brain stem is the part of your brain that keeps you breathing. The most basic functions of life are regulated by the brain stem, leading Stephenson, one of the study’s authors, to extrapolate that the discovered correlation means that, “this is evidence that there’s something core and basic, … Continue Reading ››