Disordered visual processing and oscillatory brain activity in autism and Williams Syndrome

TitleDisordered visual processing and oscillatory brain activity in autism and Williams Syndrome
Publication TypeJournal Article
AuthorsGrice, S. J., M. W. Spratling, A. Karmiloff-Smith, H. Halit, G. Csibra, M. De Haan, and M. H. Johnson
Journal titleNeuroreport
Year2001
Pages2697 - 2700
Volume12
Issue12
Abstract

Two developmental disorders, autism and Williams syndrome, are both commonly described as having difficulties in integrating perceptual features, i.e. binding spatially separate elements into a whole. It is already known that healthy adults and infants display electroencephalographic (EEG) gamma -band bursts (around 40 Hz) when the brain is required to achieve such binding. Here we explore gamma -band EEG in autism and Williams Syndrome and demonstrate differential abnormalities in the two phenotypes. We show that despite putative processing similarities at the cognitive level, binding in Williams syndrome and autism can be dissociated at the neurophysiological level by different abnormalities in underlying brain oscillatory activity. Our study is the first to identify that binding-related gamma EEG can be disordered in humans. NeuroReport 12:2697-2700 (C) 2001 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

Languageeng
Notes

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Publisher linkhttp://web.ceu.hu/phil/csibra/papers/grice.etal.2001.pdf
Unit: 
Cognitive Development Center (CDC)