| TUSCALOOSA, Ala.
- Computer games developed by a pair of University of Alabama psychology
professors are giving researchers a clearer understanding of the learning
problems children with autism face and could lead to development of
the first performance-based test to diagnose the neurological disability.
The National Institutes of Health has awarded Drs. Laura Klinger
and Mark Klinger, both associate professors in UAs department
of psychology, a $400,000 grant to develop tests to examine
how children with autism think differently from children with typical
development. Laura Klinger is a clinical child psychologist who
has worked with autistic children for 20 years while Mark Klinger
is a cognitive psychologist whose research focuses on implicit or
automatic thought processes.
There is no test for autism, said Laura Klinger, the
projects principal investigator. Currently, experts, like
Klinger, typically rely on direct observation and parental input
in diagnosing autism. While professionals receive extensive training
in observation techniques, Klinger said the method is still inconsistent,
interpretation of results can vary among researchers, and too often
evaluations are not conducted early enough in the childs life.
Ideally, these new tests will help psychologists make earlier, more
accurate diagnoses.
The earlier the intervention, the better the outcome,
Laura Klinger said. Thats why the possibility of developing
a new, more consistent test, that could eventually be used with
children during their first year of life, has the researchers excited.
The UA researchers said they believe, based on similar smaller-scale
studies they have conducted, testing autistic children on these
computer games will show they are forced, because of their disabilities,
to often use a different type of learning process than do normally
developing children.
In one of three experiments that comprise the UA researchers
overall study, the children sit in front of a computer monitor and
are shown black and white drawings of imaginary animals. These animals
look similar, but their features (feet, wings, etc.) are distinctive
in length, width, thickness, etc.
After viewing the series of animals, the children are then shown
an animal whose features are the exact average in width, length,
thickness, etc. of the features in the previously viewed animals.
This average animal (i.e., the prototype) is paired on the computer
monitor alongside a similar animal, but also one not previously
viewed by the children.
In an earlier, smaller-scale study done by Laura Klinger, responses
by the children with autism indicated the prototype animal looked
no more familiar than did the animal with which it was paired. However,
responses by children with normal development indicated the prototype
animal looked more familiar than the other animal. The ability to
learn new categories by automatically averaging or abstracting information
across multiple examples to form a prototype typically develops
during the first year of life.
An ability to categorize using prototypes is an example of an implicit
learning skill, Laura Klinger said. Implicit learning is the
type of learning we do automatically without any conscious effort,
Klinger said. Within the first year of life, typical babies learn
to relate similar things to one another, she said. This enables
them to store relevant pieces of information in their brains that
they automatically recall when needed.
Without this ability to categorize new information based on
previous experience, a child would view each new situation as something
completely unique and may become overwhelmed by the complexity of
the environment, Klinger wrote as co-author of a paper recently
published in a scholarly psychological journal.
Indeed, children with autism often experience great difficulties,
and sometimes must repeatedly practice, learning things that normally
developing children learn effortlessly. Talking, or learning how
to relate to other people by picking up on social cues, such as
understanding when someone is happy or angry, without having to
be told, is difficult for them.
Researchers believe autistic people are born with autism. Its
not something they develop later in life. However, it is difficult
to diagnose prior to age 3 and often is not diagnosed until adolescence
or later. Researchers looking at home videotapes of children later
diagnosed as autistic found signs of autism in the children when
they were as young as 12 months of age.
If thats true, and the symptoms are there at 12 months,
the cognitive impairment that causes those symptoms must be there
at 12 months, said Mark Klinger. Implicit learning typically
develops during the first year of life, and we believe that impaired
implicit learning may explain many of the social and language impairments
and repetitive behaviors that characterize autism.
In the three-year study, which began this fall, the UA researchers
will test 50 autistic children, ranging from ages 6-16, along with
two control groups of non-autistic children, with 50 in both of
those groups.
The researchers are looking for children with autism within this
age span to participate in the study. Parents or guardians of children
with autism interested in the possibility of participating should
phone 205/348-9312.
Each child participating in the study will be eligible for a gift
certificate and parents traveling long distances to participate
in the study will be eligible for travel and lodging expenses. The
funding will also be used to hire three graduate students to assist
with the research.
Although a person with autism will be autistic for life,
the quality of that life can be significantly improved through early
detection and early intervention, Laura Klinger said.
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