Monday, December 10, 2007

Best Stream Of Jenna Jameson

ON NOVA RECERCA anomalies dels nens CERVELLO


Avui em semble interessant upload to the web data in a recent study on autism, where it was discovered that children suffering from this disease have more gray matter in certain brain areas than other children did not suffer the disease. The areas of the brain where it found more gray matter are the parietal lobes of the brain, which are associated with empathy, emotional experience and learning through sight. The other area of \u200b\u200bthe brain where it is found more gray matter in the corresponding brain region corresponding to the right amygdala, which is linked to social interaction.
This research is hopeful to find new methods and ways to enfermetat l'tractor draw.
A continuation incorporate the news I tret d'on the informaciĆ³.


By Susan Kelly CHICAGO (Reuters) - Children with autism have more gray matter in brain areas that control social interaction and visual learning that children without developmental problems, according to a small study released Wednesday.
A group of researchers combined two techniques sophisticated imaging to monitor the movement of water molecules in the brain and detect small changes in gray matter volume in 13 children with Asperger syndrome and 12 healthy adolescents.
Asperger syndrome one of the autistic spectrum conditions. The average age of participants was 11 years.
The autistic children had more gray matter in the parietal lobes of the brain associated with the mirror neuron system, which is linked with empathy, emotional experience and learning through sight.
Children with the condition also showed a decrease in the volume of gray matter lodged in the brain region of the right amygdala, which is associated with varying degrees of impairment in social interaction, the study found.
The researchers presented the results of research at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society North America, held in Chicago.
Unlike earlier technology, the new technique can detect changes in thousands of small sections of the brain, said study author, Manzar Ashtari, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. "We now have more accurate tools," he said in an interview.
Larger amounts of gray matter in the left parietal area of \u200b\u200bthe brain were associated with higher IQs in children in the control group but not in autistic children, since that section of gray matter was not working properly in the past, explained Ashtari .
Autism affects about 1.5 million children in the United States according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The condition usually occurs in the first three years of life and impairs social interaction and communication skills.
Further studies of the structure and brain function to better understand how the minds of autistic children, said Ashtari, who is hoping to find intervention strategies to treat the condition.
"If more and more people try that mirror neurons are responsible in general and are involved in (dysfunction) of children with autism, then I think more people will think, 'how do we strengthen? What we can make for permitirles operate normally? "Conclude the author.

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