Functional Underconnectivity
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Autism is a problem where the brain does not communicate well with itself.
Autism Speaks just announced their top 10 research events for 2007. Confirming the Functional Underconnectivity theory of autism is one of those, link and article below.
The idea is that neural links are weak as seen on the EEG. What I explain to parents on my neurofeedback screen are the numbers indicating that the brain is everywhere shouting but no one is listening.
I just went to a conference and purchased equipment for coherence and connectivity brain training. The idea starts with a data base of optimal EEG values at the 19 standard site on the scalp. The neurofeedback training aims the client toward those values.
The procedure is to watch any DVD. When a high percentage of EEG variables are within norm the movie plays a full volume and contrast; when too many value fall outside the norm, the movie dims and the volume goes down some. The brain figures out how to keep the movie playing well by self-modulating the 248 EEG variables 256 times a second. There is a natural preference to see and hear the DVD fully, advice or encouragement are not helpful in this process.
This z-score system is unique in that it has 4 active leads on the scalp. This permits training on 6 pairs of sites at a time. (4 from the rectangle and 2 diagonal). What I typically see in autism is hypo-coherence, too little intercommunication between parts of the brain and the neurofeedback training resolving this issue with a reduction in symptoms.
Gary Ames, Licensed Psychologist 28 Rock Hill Road, Bala Cynwyd, PA 19004 610.668-3223 phone www.AlertFocus.com
http://www.autismspeaks.org/science/science_news/top_ten_autism_research_events_ 2007_functional_underconnectivity.php Functional Underconnectivity
Electrophysiological studies provide direct support of the "functional underconnectivity" theory of autism
Studies from several labs in the past few years have hinted that the deficits in autism may not be found in any single structure of the brain, but rather in wiring of the neural networks that connect the different parts of our brain together. This has lead to a theory of autism called "functional underconnectivity," which hypothesizes that brain regions are not properly linked to each other, causing them to be functionally out-of-synch.
Scientists managed to directly test this hypothesis in 2007 by recording in real time the electrical signals that travel from one part of the brain to another. University of Washington researchers were the first to use a technique called "EEG coherence" to demonstrate underconnectivity in the brains of individuals with autism, finding that brain regions that were far apart did not "talk" to each other as typical. A collaborative team from the University of Colorado and the University of California at Davis also listened in on the brain activity of individuals with autism using a second technique called "MEG." It appeared as if the brain regions that should normally be synchronized with each other were not, and that the front of the brain may be especially disconnected with other brain regions.
Our most complex cognitive and executive functions, such as perception, attention, and learning and memory, require the coordinated function of brain activity. In order to conceive targeted therapies that overcome deficits in these areas, we need to first understand the biological problems that are generating them. These studies added critical evidence that communication problems between regions of the brain may be central to the impairments in autism, and could be directing us toward the ultimate design of strategies to re-synchronize brain activity.
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