Further
Guy
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CWRU scientists find way to detect autism from brain activity
Article published in Plos One, a well respected journal, shows that researchers have "developed an efficient and reliable method of analyzing brain activity to detect autism in children."
"...Roberto Fernández Galán, an assistant professor of neurosciences at Case Western Reserve and an electrophysiologist seasoned in theoretical physics, led the research team that detected autism spectrum disorder (ASD) with 94 percent accuracy. The new analytic method offers an efficient, quantitative way of confirming a clinical diagnosis of autism."
One of the problems in the past has been that since its a spectrum disorder and was not scientifically measurable, other ailments were all packaged up together when treatments or coping methods were different. Just a pretty cool step, and one that is required in order to take the next steps of actually figuring out mechanisms and what actual causes are.
Article published in Plos One, a well respected journal, shows that researchers have "developed an efficient and reliable method of analyzing brain activity to detect autism in children."
"...Roberto Fernández Galán, an assistant professor of neurosciences at Case Western Reserve and an electrophysiologist seasoned in theoretical physics, led the research team that detected autism spectrum disorder (ASD) with 94 percent accuracy. The new analytic method offers an efficient, quantitative way of confirming a clinical diagnosis of autism."
One of the problems in the past has been that since its a spectrum disorder and was not scientifically measurable, other ailments were all packaged up together when treatments or coping methods were different. Just a pretty cool step, and one that is required in order to take the next steps of actually figuring out mechanisms and what actual causes are.
