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April 30, 2008
Helping people with autism recognize faces
Nim Tottenham stands beside an fMRI machine
Provided
Nim Tottenham, assistant professor of psychology in psychiatry at WCMC.

A key to helping people with autism better remember faces and distinguish facial emotion may be in training them to focus more on people's eyes.

In an ongoing study, Nim Tottenham, assistant professor of psychology in psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College, is examining how normal and autistic brains behave when viewing faces. While their brain is scanned in an fMRI machine, subjects look at a computer screen displaying different faces with various facial expressions. Each subject is motivated by a visual cue -- a star symbol -- to draw his or her attention to either the eyes or mouth on each face. Facial recognition areas in the brain are recorded by the fMRI, and eye movements are tracked with a camera.

Early data in both healthy and autistic subjects show that the facial recognition area of the brain becomes active only when a subject looks at the eyes. The research team hopes that early intervention with this behavioral technique in autistic children might help to train the brain to focus on others' eyes in order to improve facial recognition and facial emotion early in life.

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