Scientists discover special brain activities while mother and child with autism gaze each other

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Special activities in the brains while mother and her child with autism spectrum disorder are gazing each other have been discovered by the research team of Kanazawa University together with the research team of Osaka University. The teams used a very special equipment based on magnetoencephalography (MEG) to make three scientifically important discoveries.

  1. Brain activities upon gazing each other are low in the case of child with serious autism spectrum disorder.
  2. While the activities in child's brain with autism spectrum disorder are low, the activities in mother's brain are also low.
  3. When mother makes a movement such as nodding in response to her child, the activities in mother's brain are high.

This study was able to be performed thanks to the equipment development. MEG can detect electrical activities of the brain in a non-invasive and hence non-harmful manner, by the utilization of superconducting sensor technology, with very high time and space resolutions. The researchers have developed an MEG for a child (only one copy in Japan). Furthermore, a very special equipment has been constructed, based on the MEG for a child as above, which can be used for an adult and a child simultaneously, the equipment available only in Kanazawa in the world.

While a parent and a child are gazing each other, enormous amounts of social information are exchanged in an unconscious manner. That is, reading of the face allows new emotion to emerge, which appears on your own face and affects the other; these interactions continue without cease. Bidirectional interactions are thought to play important roles in the development of child's sociality.

Simultaneous measurements of brain activities while mother and child are gazing each other by the current study are expected to be a big step to elucidation of development of child's social brain.

Source: Kanazawa University

Comments

  1. Mary Jo CT Mary Jo CT United States says:

    It is "are gazing At each other".  Putting it differently is creepy.

  2. Mary Jo CT Mary Jo CT United States says:

    There are a couple other grammatical errors. I wonder how thoroughly the study was conducted - if it used varying levels of ASD, if it used various races, if it used NT examples, what ages...? Lots is incomplete and confusing here and adds to potential over placing of Mom responsibility in ASD.

  3. Shane Zilla Shane Zilla United States says:

    whut? freaking duh. autistic children arent brain dead. they do perceive as "normal" people do. they just have trouble expressing. every autistic person is not sheldon cooper.

    • Debbie Kessel Debbie Kessel United States says:

      not so.... my grandson does not find humor or interest in many things I or the typical person would. Yet can find extreme humor in things we don't even notice. So the idea that his brain doesn't fire off to facial gesturing the same as mine would is really interesting. We have always known that autistic people can't relate to emotional cues. Depending on the level of severity there are more noticeable differences. Someone on the low will react completely different than someone with Aspergers. No one suggests they are brain dead.... but they definitely relate differently. So when my grandson intently looks into my eyes....I feel a sense of connection that fires off synopsis in my brain...this small study is just suggesting those same firing are not happening with him ....hence the possibility of finding some answers to this very complex this called Autism.

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
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