Authors
Catherine Lord, Traolach S Brugha, Tony Charman, James Cusack, Guillaume Dumas, Thomas Frazier, Emily JH Jones, Rebecca M Jones, Andrew Pickles, Matthew W State, Julie Lounds Taylor, Jeremy Veenstra-VanderWeele
Publication date
2020/1/16
Source
Nature reviews Disease primers
Volume
6
Issue
1
Pages
1-23
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Description
Autism spectrum disorder is a construct used to describe individuals with a specific combination of impairments in social communication and repetitive behaviours, highly restricted interests and/or sensory behaviours beginning early in life. The worldwide prevalence of autism is just under 1%, but estimates are higher in high-income countries. Although gross brain pathology is not characteristic of autism, subtle anatomical and functional differences have been observed in post-mortem, neuroimaging and electrophysiological studies. Initially, it was hoped that accurate measurement of behavioural phenotypes would lead to specific genetic subtypes, but genetic findings have mainly applied to heterogeneous groups that are not specific to autism. Psychosocial interventions in children can improve specific behaviours, such as joint attention, language and social engagement, that may affect further development and …
Total citations
2020202120222023202468219377406261
Scholar articles
C Lord, TS Brugha, T Charman, J Cusack, G Dumas… - Nature reviews Disease primers, 2020