- Missing legs of 900-year-old Buddhist statue found in Cambodian jungle
- Bust of Julius Caesar recovered from Rhone River on display at exhibition in France
- Track record of ancient apocalyptic prophecies quashes gravity of 2012 prediction
- Sexual noises broadcast over London station speakers!
- Computer simulations may be overstating impact of climate change on biodiversity
- Climate warming and loss of ice unprecedented in last 14,000 years
Autistic kids should be taught in smaller groups, say experts
Washington, July 3 (ANI): A new study suggests that children with autism need to be taught in smaller groups.
"Sensory integration dysfunction has long been speculated to be a core component of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) but there has been precious little hard empirical evidence to support this notion," said Dr.
-
E-mail Article
Printer Friendly
Text-Size

John J. Foxe, Professor of Neuroscience at CCNY.
"Viewing a speaker's articulatory movements can greatly improve a listener's ability to understand spoken words, and this is especially the case under noisy environmental conditions," he added.
Foxe said that children with autism may become distressed in large classroom settings simply because they are unable to understand basic speech, if the environment is sufficiently noisy.
Multisensory speech system develops relatively slowly across the childhood years, and that considerable tuning of this system continues to occur even into early adolescence.
However, autistic kids lag almost 5 years behind typically developing children in this crucial multisensory ability.
Foxe said that further studies might result in advances in the understanding of ASD, and the communication abilities of individuals with autism by identifying the neural mechanisms that are at the root of these multisensory deficits. (ANI)
Autistic children interact more easily with robots than humans.
'Autistic' mice may help study genetics of the disorder.
Autistic kids have 'supercharged brains'.
Autistic infants look more at others' mouths than eyes.
Autistic toddlers focus on mouths rather than eyes .



