PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Baby communication gives clues to autism

University of Miami researchers find that babies' non-verbal communication skills can help predict outcomes in children at high risk of developing Autism

2012-10-01
(Press-News.org) CORAL GABLES, FL -- Approximately 19 percent of children with a sibling diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) will develop Autism due to shared genetic and environmental vulnerabilities, according to previous studies. For that reason, University of Miami (UM) psychologists are developing ways to predict the occurrence of ASD in high-risk children, early in life, in hopes that early intervention will lead to better outcomes in the future. Their findings are published in the journal Infancy. The study is one of the first to show that measures of non-verbal communication in children, as young as eight months of age, predict autism symptoms that become evident by the third year of life. The results suggest that identifying children, who are having difficulties early enough, can enhance the effects of interventions. "For children at risk of developing an ASD, specific communication-oriented interventions during the first years of life can lessen the severity of autism's impact," says Daniel Messinger, professor of Psychology in the College of Arts and Sciences at UM and principal investigator of the study. Before children learn to talk, they communicate non-verbally by using eye contact and gestures. These abilities are called referential communication and are in development by eight months of age. However, "impairments in non-verbal referential communication are characteristic of older children with ASD," says Caroline Grantz a doctoral candidate in the Department of Psychology at UM and co-author of the paper. In the study, a team of researchers tested two groups of children. One group was at high-risk for ASD and the second group was at low-risk. The evaluations took place during 15 to 20 minutes sessions, at 8, 10, 12, 15 and 18 months of life. The team measured the development of three forms of non-verbal communication: Initiating Joint Attention (IJA) - the way an infant shows interest in an object or event to a partner. For example, making eye contact and pointing to show a toy. Initiating Behavioral Requests (IBR)-the manner in which an infant requests help from a partner, by making eye contact to request a toy, reaching toward, pointing to, or giving the examiner a desired toy. Responding to Joint Attention (RJA)-the way infants respond and follow the behavior of a partner. For example, when the examiner points to something and the child follows the experimenter's gaze to look at that an object. The results show that lower levels of IJA and IBR growth between eight and 18 months predicted the severity of ASD symptoms for children that had a sibling with Autism. "Overall, infants with the lowest rates of IJA at eight months showed lower social engagement with an examiner at 30 months of age," says Lisa Ibañez, research scientist at the University of Washington Autism Center and first author of the paper. Ibañez conducted the study as part of her dissertation research in the Department of Psychology at UM. These results are important enough that the research team is following up the study with collaborator Wendy Stone, Professor of Psychology and Director of the University of Washington Autism Center. The study is titled "The Development of Referential Communication and Autism Symptomatology in High-Risk Infants." The project was funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. ### The University of Miami's mission is to educate and nurture students, to create knowledge, and to provide service to our community and beyond. Committed to excellence and proud of the diversity of our University family, we strive to develop future leaders of our nation and the world. www.miami.edu


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Eliminating visual clutter helps people with mild cognitive impairment

Eliminating visual clutter helps people with mild cognitive impairment
2012-10-01
A new study from Georgia Tech and the University of Toronto suggests that memory impairments for people diagnosed with early stage Alzheimer's disease may be due, in part, to problems in determining the differences between similar objects. The findings also support growing research indicating that a part of the brain once believed to support memory exclusively – the medial temporal lobe - also plays a role in object perception. The results are published in the October edition of Hippocampus. Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a disorder commonly thought to be a precursor ...

Researchers halt autoimmune disease myasthenia gravis in mice

2012-10-01
Working with mice, Johns Hopkins researchers say they have developed a gene-based therapy to stop the rodent equivalent of the autoimmune disease myasthenia gravis by specifically targeting the destructive immune response the disorder triggers in the body. The technique, the result of more than 10 years of work, holds promise for a highly specific therapy for the progressively debilitating muscle-weakening human disorder, one that avoids the need for long-term, systemic immunosuppressant drugs that control the disease but may create unwanted side effects. The research, ...

Advance directives: Implementation leaves much to be desired

2012-10-01
Advance directives are not widespread among the elderly. This was revealed by a cross-sectional study of 11 German nursing homes performed by Sarah Sommer and her colleagues and presented in the latest issue of Deutsches Ärzteblatt International (Dtsch Arztebl Int 2012; 109(37): 577). In the year 2007, only 11% of the nursing home residents had a personally signed advance directive, while a further 1.4% had a proxy directive, i.e., a document signed not by the resident but by a representative. Few of the advance directives made any provision for an acute health crisis. ...

Trapping weevils and saving monarchs

2012-10-01
This press release is available in Spanish.Ensuring the monarch butterfly's survival by saving its milkweed habitat could result from U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) studies initially intended to improve detection of boll weevils with pheromone traps. Charles Suh and his colleagues at the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) Areawide Pest Management Research Unit in College Station, Texas, have found a pheromone formula that is attractive to a major milkweed pest, the milkweed stem weevil. The discovery stems from research originally designed to help improve ...

Macrophage accumulation of triglycerides yields insights into atherosclerosis

2012-10-01
Bethesda, MD—A research report appearing in the Journal of Leukocyte Biology helps explain how specific immune cells, called macrophages, accumulate triglycerides to support their function. Because a characteristic finding in atherosclerosis is the accumulation of fat in macrophages in the arterial wall, understanding how macrophages accumulate triglycerides may lead to new approaches toward slowing or stopping the development of atherosclerosis. "Activation of macrophages leads to the accumulation of triglycerides in macrophages by multiple pathways that may have beneficial ...

Genetic activity in the entire genome of multicellular fungi analysed at a stroke

2012-10-01
With a combination of microscopic laser scissors and modern sequencing methods, biologists at the Ruhr-Universität have analyzed the activity of genes in the entire genome of certain fungi in one fell swoop. Especially with organisms in the millimetre size range, it is a particular challenge because little cell material is available. The scientists of the RUB Department of General and Molecular Botany took advantage of the method to investigate the development of small multicellular fungi. The results are reported in the journal BMC Genomics. Gene activity differs from ...

How sexual power can be disempowering

2012-10-01
Gender roles and norms play a key role in sexual behavior between men and women. It is often assumed that men should dominate women sexually. This assumption may lead to loss of both power and the ability to control sexual behavior among women and men, as well as lead to increased sexual risk-taking, such as not using a female condom. The new study, by Dr. Lisa Rosenthal from Yale University in the US, and her colleagues, is published online in Springer's journal Sex Roles. Social dominance orientation is a measure of people's level of support for social power inequalities ...

Study questions association between common heartburn drugs and risk of pneumonia

2012-10-01
Previous studies that have associated the use of proton pump inhibitors (PPI) – which include popular anti-heartburn medications like Prilosec and Nexium – with an increased incidence of pneumonia may not have found a true cause-and-effect relationship. A study that has been released online by the Journal of General Internal Medicine outlines a strategy for determining when the results of such observational studies may have been distorted by unmeasured factors and then finds that may be the case with the association between PPIs and pneumonia risk. "Our study is the ...

PET predicts early response to treatment for head and neck cancer patients

2012-10-01
Reston, Va. (October 1, 2012) – Determining the optimal treatment course and predicting outcomes may get easier in the future for patients with head and neck sqaumous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs) with the use of an investigational imaging agent. Research published in the October issue of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine shows that positron emission tomography (PET) imaging with 3'-deoxy-3'F-18-fluorothymidine (18-F-FLT) during treatment and early follow-up has the potential to predict therapeutic responses and identify patients needing close follow-up to detect persistent or ...

Radiology is front and center in health care reform

Radiology is front and center in health care reform
2012-10-01
AUGUSTA, Ga. – While it's leveling off, a decade of increased use of sophisticated, expensive, imaging studies has put radiologists and their specialty front and center in health care reform, says the chair of an academic radiology department. That seemingly dubious distinction gives radiologists the chance to take a leadership role in reducing costs, optimizing utilization and improving patient care, said Dr. James V. Rawson, Chair of the Medical College of Georgia Department of Radiology at Georgia Health Sciences University. Rawson and Dr. Ruth Carlos, Professor ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Pulmonary embolism in children more common than previously thought

Combined oral contraceptives triple risk of cryptogenic stroke in young women, new study shows

Simple process extends lifetime of perovskite solar cells

Candidate drug that boosts protective brain protein in mice has potential to treat Alzheimer’s Disease

Scientists discover one of the world’s thinnest semiconductor junctions forming inside a quantum material

Illinois researchers explore COVID-19 vaccine attitudes and motivations, finding common values

Study identifies new mechanism for reducing female post-operative pain

Changes in BMI during adolescence may explain link between air pollution exposure and insulin resistance, study shows

Marshall University researchers identify promising treatment for fentanyl-xylazine overdoses

Research team homes in on genetics behind blackberry thorns

UF water researchers develop prediction system for harmful algae

Remotely moving objects underwater using sound #ASA188

From tiny worms to giant squid: new global database reveals the hidden power of body size in the ocean

Cell Painting identifies flavonoids that are toxic to bladder cancer cells

American College of Cardiology issues guidance on using Apple Watch for heart health monitoring

2025 Andreas Grüntzig Ethica Award presented to Lars Wallentin and Stefan James on behalf of Swedish cardiovascular registry experts

Research reveals unexpected roles of TEAD proteins in neurodevelopment

UTA ATLAS team shares Breakthrough Prize in physics

New research on ALS opens up for early treatment

Molecules in blood and urine could reveal how much ultra-processed food you eat

Language isn’t just for communication — it also shapes how sensory experiences are stored in the brain

Reducing underwater noise when installing subsea structures #ASA188

How membranes may have brought about the chemistry of life on earth

NIH researchers develop biomarker score for predicting diets high in ultra-processed foods

AI and partnerships are vital to tackling food contamination - study

Fluridone widens Palmer pigweed control options for rice growers, but stick to the label

Christopher Kane appointed President of American Board of Urology

SwRI breaks pressure and temperature record for sCO2 materials testing

Native turtles return to Yosemite after removal of invasive bullfrogs

Maternal air pollution exposure worsens asthma severity for offspring

[Press-News.org] Baby communication gives clues to autism
University of Miami researchers find that babies' non-verbal communication skills can help predict outcomes in children at high risk of developing Autism