ASD & Brain Differences compared to NT individuals Flashcards

1
Q

What are anatomical differences in the “Autistic brain”?

A
  • Larger brain in young child with Autism
  • Frontal lobe especially larger, can cause other areas to be smaller (not due to swelling)
  • 7% less volume than NT brain
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2
Q

What are the neurochemical differences?

A

-elevated levels of dopamine and serotonin (checked through blood work), can effect mood, arousal level, pain sensitivity, body temperature, selective attention

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3
Q

Describe the Interconnectivity Theory

A

Study on Corpus Collosum:
less efficient communication between hemispheres
-narrow synaptic activity, does not reach frontal lobe/outer cortex (higher functioning skills)
“Broken Bridge”
-planning/problem-solving difficulties
-neurobehavioral differences
-problems planning, problem solving, lengthy sentences

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4
Q

Tools to help those with Information Processing issues

A
  • break it down into smaller steps
  • write down directions
  • let them repeat back instructions
  • visualization
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5
Q

Expressive Language Deficit

A

Broca’s: understands but harder time expressing

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6
Q

Social Information Processing

A

-same physiological response whether you are excited or mad
-Parts of Brain Active during social interaction:
Amygdala- regulating emotion
Frontal cortices- planning/execution (planning before acting)
Parietal lobe- processing sensory (tactile, etc.)

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7
Q

Central Coherence

A
  • core deficit in this population
  • trouble getting the “whole picture”
  • will see pieces in a picture but not the relevance of the whole scene
    ex: man taking a nap vs medical emergency
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8
Q

Working Memory and Learning

A

Learning is a step-by-step process

  • WM used to process/store lengthy and complex information
  • difficulty staying on task
  • ASD Level 3 categorized as ID
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