What is different about an autistic brain
How this autistic person recovers mental energy during the day photo by anh nguyen on unsplash people call it different things:The brains of people with autism show a variety of structural differences from those of controls, according to a large imaging study 1.In autistic brains, there is much more folding in some of both the left and right lobes.These brain parts are layered like an onion, with the cerebrum being the outermost part, composed of left and right cerebral hemispheres.As structural differences are related to different functions of brain domain, it is necessary to observe the brain functions across the human lifespan.These results suggest that common molecular changes may underlie autism pathogenesis, despite the genetic.
About 75% of the autistic brains differ very little in gene expression between the temporal and frontal lobes.Among these more newly evolved regions of the brain is the frontal cortex (hill and walsh, 2005), and recent evidence shows that disorders of frontal cortex development produce social defects.In this special report, we detail the regional consequences of autism, one brain area at a time.Is an autistic brain different?[1] unusual brain growth patterns in early life in patients with autistic disorder:Importantly, unlike the cortex, midbrain regions are not known to be associated with autism conditions.
That images of working brains could show how the brain of a person with autism is different.Most of us haven't had our brain scanned.