Monday, May 24, 2010

autism

Have you notice that most kids with mild autism never look you in the eye or they do for a short amount of time. I am noticing that my husband has a few autism tendencies.

HOW DOES OUR BRAIN DEVELOP DURING CHILDHOOD?

POSTED BY DR. MEHMET OZ

When we're infants, we have all of this brain material compacted in a small space. Like tree branches, they overlap. That garbled anatomy makes it difficult to do some things, such as making decisions, because the jumbled structures crossing one another make it nearly impossible for our brains to focus on one thing.

As we get older-3, 4, and 5 years old-our brain starts deciding which branch points get developed and which sort of fall off. So the more we use certain parts of our brain as toddlers, the more we develop those kinds of neurons, while the opposite holds true for those neurons we don't use. The way we train our brains at an early age actually has an effect on which of those neuron systems will become good and strong and which won't.

In autistic children, the current best theory goes, those underused links don't fall off, meaning the jumbled mass makes it more difficult for autistic children to focus because too much is going on. This is different from Attention Deficit Disorder, which affects the ability to concentrate. Many of us actually had it as kids (but it was rarely diagnosed years ago), and difficulty concentrating on only one subject can be something we even carry into adulthood.

That explanation of neurological development can partly explain why our brains function in certain ways as we age. If we didn't listen to music as a child, or learn how to ski, or learn to speak French, then it becomes more difficult to learn those things as an adult because those neuron connections aren't developed for processing the necessary information

Does an autistic adult behave differently from an autistic child?

by Cleveland Clinic

Adults with autism demonstrate the same range of symptoms as children and adolescents with autism. The diagnostic criteria that are set forth by the American Psychiatric Association do not change according to age.

1 comment:

John Ross Barnes said...

Hm, not sure about that, hon, but I do sometimes seem to miss patterns in my own behavior. I always was just a little "different" though.