Autism May Be A Disorder Of Prediction, According To MIT Researchers

Posted: Published on October 9th, 2014

This post was added by Dr Simmons

April Flowers for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

A wide range of complex neurodevelopment disorders make up the autism spectrum disorder. In the US, the rate of children being born with some version of autism is on the rise. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports that in 2000, the rate of autism was an estimated 1 child in every 150. In 2010, that rate had increased to 1 child in every 68. Autism occurs in all racial, ethnic and socioeconomic groups, and is five times more common among males than females. Despite the rising prevalence, researchers still do not know exactly what causes autism.

People who suffer from autism have a variety of symptoms, including difficulty interacting with others, repetitive behaviors, and hypersensitivity to stimuli like sound and touch. A new study from MIT describes a hypothesis that could account for the wide variety of behavioral symptoms. It may also provide a neurological foundation for many of the disparate features of autism spectrum disorder. The results of their study have been published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

According to the study, autism might be rooted in an impaired ability to predict events and other peoples actions. The world is a magical place to the autistic child, rather than an orderly one, because of seemingly random and unpredictable events. If this is true, then repetitive behaviors and an insistence on a highly structured environment become coping strategies rather than symptoms. If validated, the MIT teams unifying theory could offer new strategies for the treatment of autism.

At the moment, the treatments that have been developed are driven by the end symptoms. Were suggesting that the deeper problem is a predictive impairment problem, so we should directly address that ability, MIT professor of brain and cognitive sciences Pawan Sinha explained in a recent statement.

I dont know what techniques would be most effective for improving predictive skills, but it would at least argue for the target of a therapy being predictive skills rather than other manifestations of autism, he added.

Parental reports of autistic children insisting on very controlled, predictable environments lead the team to consider the idea of prediction skills as a possible underlying cause for autism.

The need for sameness is one of the most uniform characteristics of autism, Sinha says. Its a short step away from that description to think that the need for sameness is another way of saying that the child with autism needs a very predictable setting.

Most of us routinely use prediction skills to manage daily activities and events. For example, we predict other peoples behaviors, or the likely trajectory of a ball in flight, to know how to behave in that situation. The MIT team believes that autistic children may not have the same computational abilities for prediction.

Such a deficit could produce many of the most common autism symptoms such as repetitive behaviors and insistence on rigid structure which have been shown to soothe anxiety. This is true even for people without autism.

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Autism May Be A Disorder Of Prediction, According To MIT Researchers

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