Guest guest Posted November 7, 2001 Report Share Posted November 7, 2001 FEAT DAILY NEWSLETTER Sacramento, California http://www.feat.org " Healing Autism: No Finer a Cause on the Planet " ______________________________________________________ November 7, 2001 News Morgue Search www.feat.org/search/news.asp 2 - New Papers From The International Meeting for Autism Research The International Meeting for Autism Research (IMFAR) is two-day scientific meeting comprised of all types of autism research - from molecular biology to neuropsychology to treatment will be represented at their meeting in San Diego, November 9 and 10. The abstracts below are some of the scientific papers being presented Friday afternoon by the researchers. Additional Friday afternoon and Saturday's reports will be reproduced here in subsequent postings of the FEAT Newsletter. All of the information is from the IMFAR website: http://www.imfar.org/index2.html NEUROPSYCHOLOGY ABSTRACTS Abstract Reasoning In Autism: A Dissociation Between Rule-Learning & Concept Formation Abilities. N. J. Minshew, G. Goldstein and J. Markus. Univ. of Pgh. Sch. of Med., Pittsburgh, PA 15213. Rule-learning and concept formation are separable cognitive abilities within the abstract reasoning domain. It was hypothesized that concept formation tasks, such as free sorting procedures, would discriminate more accurately than attribute identification and rule-learning tasks, such as the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test and the Halstead Category Test, between 90 individuals with high functioning autism and 107 normal controls. Performance was significantly different between individuals with autism and a matched control group on all abstract reasoning tasks. However, stepwise discriminant function analyses revealed that tests of concept formation had greater discriminatory capacity than tests of concept identification. This dissociation between rule-learning or concept identification and higher-order conceptual integration within the domain of abstract reasoning appears to be relatively unique to autism. The presence of this dissociation in autism suggests there may be a distinct biological basis for these two categories of abstraction abilities. This dissociation provides an explanation for the rule bound behavior typical of autism, difficulty with generalization and with novel situations for which rules are not known. We conclude that the dissociation between concept identification and concept formation more accurately characterizes the range of abstract reasoning abilities found in higher ability individuals with autism than executive dysfunction. This study was supported by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Grant HD35469 and National Institute of Neurological Disorders Grant NS33355 to J. Minshew and by the Medical Research Service, Department of Veterans Affairs. * * * Left Medial Frontal Cortex Joint Attention And Theory Of Mind. P. Mundy. Center for Autism and Related Disorders, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33146. Autism is characterized, in part, by a sequential developmental disturbance in joint attention development and social cognition, as measured on Theory of Mind measures. Recently, three studies have revealed a left, medial-frontal contribution to the development of joint attention skills in infancy (Caplan, 1993, Mundy et al. 2001, Yoder, in preparation). Converging with these data, numerous studies have implicated left medial and left inferior frontal contributions to theory of mind performance in typical and atypical samples (e. g., Fletcher, et al. 1995; Sabbaugh & , 1999; et al. 2000). These data suggest that a consideration of the functions associated with a brain system involving the left medial cortex, and its connections with the frontal eye fields, motor cortex, cingulated cortex, thalamus and Broca's area may make a heuristic contribution to emerging theory on " social " brain circuits involved in autism. This paper will: a) provide a review of data connecting left medial process to joint attention and theory of mind, and present a model of the potential contribution of the left medial cotical system to understanding autistic pathology. The relations of this system to other CNS areas likely involved in autism (e. g., cerebellar, temporal, orbital or dorsolateral frontal cortex) will be discussed. Supported by: NICHD R01 HD38052-01, SAMHSA KD1 SP09894-01; FLORIDA STATE Dept. of Education, FDLRS Specialized Entrant * * * Evidence For Semantic Knowledge Across Three Input Modalities In Low-Functioning Autism. S. Higgins, K. I. Boser, & B. Gordon Div. of Cog. Neuro., Dept. of Neurology, s Hopkins Med. Inst., Baltimore, MD 21287. Attentional, motivational and sensory deficits in low-functioning autism, as well as response bias and strategies, make assessment of acquired knowledge especially challenging in this population. To measure semantic knowledge more reliably, we developed a set of tasks assessing comprehension of concrete nouns across 3 modalities (written, auditory and iconic) in a low-functioning non-verbal autistic child (SR). We examined consistency of responses and evaluated performance on items previously trained in a picture to written word task on the Foundations computer system. The subject was required to match a stimulus to a corresponding color photograph, and the task included 300 items, presented 3 times, from 15 natural and 15 non-natural categories. Distracter items shared both semantic and visual, only semantic, only visual, or neither feature with the target. Results. SR demonstrated generalization of written training to other input modalities. Trained items were more likely to be correct across all presentations and modalities. He generalized to untrained nouns, particularly for trained semantic categories. SR performed better on natural than non-natural categories across all modalities. He made more errors to visual distracters in non-natural categories for icon and written matching and more errors to semantic distracters in natural categories for auditory and written matching. Therefore, the current findings extend our previous results with AI, tested only in the auditory modality, to SR, demonstrating evidence for broader semantic knowledge when assessed across several input modalities. Supported by: Dev. Cog. Neurosci. Gift & the Ben Endowment. * * * Discrimination Shift Learning And Task Complexity In Low-Functioning Autism. K. I. Boser, S. Higgins, and B. Gordon. Div. of Cog. Neuro., Dept. of Neurology, The s Hopkins Med. Inst., Baltimore, MD 21287. Young children demonstrate initial use of exemplar-based strategies in discrimination learning while older children are able to " abstract " dimensional information. Extracting dimensional information leads to faster learning of reversal shifts in which the rewarded feature shifts within a dimension from training to test, but is impeded by memorization of exemplars. However, memorization does not interfere in non-reversal shift learning, since the rewarded feature shifts to a new dimension at test. This task is an important measure of flexibility crucial for categorization and concept learning. We examined 2 low-functioning, nonverbal children with autism (SR & FN) and contrasted different methods for training discriminations: 1) two dimensions were varied simultaneously within two different training sets; 2) one dimension was varied across both sets; and 3) one dimension was varied in only one set. Results. SR learned reversal shifts faster than FN when both stimulus dimensions were varied simultaneously, although many trials to meet criterion (9/ 10 correct) were required. Varying the irrelevant dimension across rather than within trials facilitated reversal shift learning for FN but not SR. Both subjects had greater difficulty learning reversal than non-reversal shifts when one set was presented in which only the relevant dimension varied. These results have implications for teaching cognitive skills to children with autism, particularly those requiring flexible discrimination such as early concept and category learning. Supported by: Dev. Cog. Neurosci. Gift & the Ben Endowment. ___________________________________________________________ >>> PROFESSORS, TEACHERS, TRAINERS <<< Autism Continuing Education for Students Now Available ADVISE TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE FEAT Daily Newsletter, NO FEE. http://www.feat.org/FEATNews ____________________________________________________________ * * * " Item Mortality " : Factors And Possible Explanations. J. O'Grady, K. I. Boser, B. Gordon. Div. of Cognitive Neurology, Dept. of Neurology, The s Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, MD 21287. " Item mortality " is the apparent " forgetting " of previously learned items as new ones are taught. While normal subjects demonstrate this, it is a particularly prominent and frustrating problem in trying to teach low-functioning individuals with autism. There are a number of possible explanations of item mortality, including, insufficient initial learning, limited working memory, rapid forgetting, retroactive interference and response competition. However, what factor or combination of factors is responsible for the effect in these individuals has not been determined. We describe a series of educational and research studies of a single individual that establish a reproducible methodology for demonstrating item mortality and for investigating its causative factors. The basic tasks involved line drawings to picture matching and auditory stimulus to picture matching and the task format had been well practiced by the subject. Item mortality was reproducibly demonstrated with different items, across the two different input modalities. Item difficulty, working memory demands (both for stimuli and for responses), and new learning requirements are to be systematically varied in each modality, in ongoing studies. Relevance of these data for possible explanations for item mortality in this situation will be discussed. Supported in part by the Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience gift account, The Therapeutic Cognitive Neuroscience Endowment, and The A. Endowment for Aging, Alzheimer's Disease, and Autism. * * * Impaired Learning Of Rotary Pursuit In Children With Autism. S. H. Mostofsky, M. C. Goldberg and M. B. Denckla. Kennedy Krieger Institute, s Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205. Deficits in procedural learning (acquisition of skills through repeated practice or exposure to task) have been reported in children with autism (Mostofsky et al., 2000), based on findings of impaired implicit sequence learning on the Serial Reaction Time Test (SRTT). The goal of this study was to determine whether children (8-12 years) with high functioning autism (HFA) also show deficits in acquisition of another motor skill, Rotary Pursuit. Seven children with HFA and six gender-, age-, and IQ-matched controls performed four successive blocks of Rotary Pursuit trials. Each block consisted of four trials, each lasting 20-seconds, at a speed of 20 rpm. In blocks 1, 2, and 4 a circular pattern was presented; in block 3 a square pattern was presented. There was a 20-minute break between blocks 1 and 2. Learning was measured by the increase in mean time on-target across the three circular blocks. Results: Controls were significantly more on-target across all blocks than were children with HFA (F = 20.7 (1, 11), p = .0008). A repeated measure ANOVA revealed that controls showed a significantly greater improvement in performance across the three circular blocks than did children with HFA (F = 19.4 (1, 11), p = .001). In conclusion, these results suggest that children with HFA have deficits in motor skill learning during Rotary Pursuit; although, a factor of poor motor execution cannot be excluded. The findings provide further evidence for a deficit in procedural learning in children with autism; however future studies are needed to address whether the observed deficits are secondary to impaired learning, execution, or both. * * * Examining The Relationship Between Executive Functions And Restricted, Repetitive Symptoms Of Autistic Disorder. B. R. , A. J. Lincoln, S. Ozonoff., Z. Lai. Consulting Measurement Group, Inc., Institute for Developmental Research & California School of Professional Psychology, University of Utah, Department of Psychology, Scripts Research Institute. Objective: To determine if a relationship exists between executive functions (i. e., cognitive flexibility, planning, working memory, fluency, and response inhibition) and the restricted, repetitive symptoms of Autistic Disorder (AD). Method: Seventeen adults with Autistic Disorder were matched on age and Performance IQ to 17 healthy, nonautistic controls. Executive functions were measured by the Delis-Kaplin Executive Function Scales were administered to all the participants and autistic symptoms were measured by the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule, the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised, the Gilliam Autism Rating Scale, and the Aberrant Behavior Checklist-Community. Results: The current study replicated the well-established executive function profile of Autistic Disorder (i. e., deficits in cognitive flexibility and planning, relatively unimpaired abilities in working memory and response inhibition, and mixed findings in generativity). Cognitive flexibility, working memory, and response inhibition were all found to be highly related to restricted, repetitive symptoms, but planning and verbal fluency were not found to be significantly correlated to restricted, repetitive symptoms. Obtained data also suggest that cognitive flexibility plays a mediating role between nonverbal fluency and restricted, repetitive symptoms. We found that multiple executive functions are strongly associated with restricted, repetitive behaviors. Conclusion: A complex relationship exists between the restricted, repetitive symptoms of AD and executive function component processes. When accounting for restricted, repetitive symptoms of AD the entire executive profile of AD needs to be considered. Moreover, findings from the present study suggest a cognitive deficit model is insufficient to fully account for restricted, repetitive symptoms of Autistic Disorder. * * * Time Processing Deficits In Autism . Jill Boucher, Department of Psychology, University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK. It is proposed that autism is caused by two fundamental psychological deficits. One of these (a primary intersubjectivity or socio-emotional processing deficit) is seen as the main cause of autistic socio-communicative impairments, and is not the topic of this presentation. The second primary deficit is hypothesized to affect biopsychological time processing, and is seen as the main cause of the repetitive behaviours and lack of creativity which partly define autism, and also of the language impairments and mental retardation which commonly co-occur with autism. In this presentation the time processing deficit theory will be outlined, and the results of studies testing predictions arising from the hypothesis will be reported. The findings presented will be discussed in relation to the theory itself, and in relation to other current psychological explanations of autism, in particular, the weak central coherence theory and Minshew's notion of defective higher order integrative functions. * * * Adaptability In Children With Autism Spectrum Disorders. S. L. Hepburn, S. J. , W. L. Stone, & G. Shub. University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO 80262. " Adaptability " is a temperament characteristic that refers to the ease with which an individual modifies behavior to adjust to changes in social context. We hypothesized that low adaptability may be an early manifestation of the insistence on sameness behaviors (e. g., restricted interests, strict adherence to routines) which distinguish children with autism from other developmentally disordered groups after the age of 3. To evaluate this hypothesis, we conducted two studies. In the first study, 28 two-year olds with autism were compared to 27 children with developmental delays (groups comparable on mental and chronological age) on parent report of adaptability. Two-year olds with autism were significantly less adaptable than their peers, F( 1,55)= 4.72, p<. 05. Adaptability was significantly correlated with severity of autism symptoms (r=. 37, p<. 01) and receptive language ability (r=-. 27, p<. 05), but not to overall mental age. In the second study, we compared 2-year olds with autism to 42 four-to-five year olds with autism (mean age= 59 mos.) on adaptability. Younger children were significantly less adaptable, F( 1,66)= 7.15, p<. 01. A third inquiry into the relations between adaptability at age 2 and insistence on sameness at age 4 is underway and suggests a strong association. Implications for diagnosing very young children and theoretical associations between adaptability and frontal lobe functioning will be discussed. Supported by: NICHD P01 HD35468 and NIMH MH50620 _______________________________________________________ >> DO SOMETHING ABOUT AUTISM NOW << Subscribe, Read, then Forward the FEAT Daily Newsletter. To Subscribe go to www.feat.org/FEATnews No Cost! _______________________________________________________ Lenny Schafer, Editor PhD Ron Sleith Kay Stammers Editor@... Decelie CALENDAR: Guppy events@... Unsubscribe: FEATNews-signoff-request@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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