Structural and functional MRI and autism

Aims:

To identify differences in autistic people, non-autistic people and siblings of autistic people, in terms of the structure and function of the brain.

Background:

It is now well established that there are structural and functional differences in the brains of autistic and non-autistic people, although large scale studies are needed to verify these. This is one of the aims of the LEAP study which is part of EU-AIMS and is being extended into AIMS2TRIALS. The Cambridge Family Study also tested siblings of autistic people to see if some of the differences exist in those who share 50% of their genes with an autistic person. The MRC-AIMS study tested autistic and non-autistic males and females to identify differences related to diagnosis and gender and their interaction.

Methods:

Structural and functional MRI, the former including both grey and white matter studies, and the latter including a range of social and non social tasks.

Results:

Results will appear on our website.

Importance:

These studies are important since autism is fundamentally a neurodevelopmental condition. Our studies include individuals at younger ages, to track these differences to their earliest onset.

Relevance:

This research is primarily to increase understanding of the causes of autism.

Selected Publications

Staff:

Funders:

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