2008

  • John Constantino: Educating communities about autism's complexities
    3 November 2008
    Comments ( 1 )
    In the fall of 1980, when he left his hometown of St. Louis, Missouri, for undergraduate studies at Cornell University in upstate New York, John Constantino was determined to pursue one of two careers: a doctor or a school teacher.
  • Cathy Lord: Setting standards for autism diagnosis
    30 June 2008
    Comments ( 1 )
    In the late 1960s, as an undergraduate student in psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles, Cathy Lord spent a couple of hours a day teaching two young boys with autism.
  • Christopher Walsh: Solving mysteries of the mind in the Middle East
    13 May 2008
    Comments ( 0 )
    At first glance, the waiting room at the Ministry of Health Hospital in Muscat, Oman, may look different than that of your average American hospital. Men dressed all in white and women in black burqas wait in separate rooms, even if they are members of the same family. But talking to these families soon reveals just how similar they are to their American counterparts, says Christopher Walsh, a neurologist who has studied neurodevelopmental disorders in the Middle East for nearly 10 years.
  • Ami Klin & Warren Jones: Melding art and science for autism
    6 May 2008
    Comments ( 0 )
    Sitting on a sofa in his office at the Yale Child Study Center, Ami Klin plays a movie clip on a tiny laptop. The clip stars a younger Klin, with larger glasses but the same easy smile, vying for the attention of a young girl with autism. His face inches from hers, he speaks in a warm, animated voice. But the girl never looks from the toy blocks in her hands. Suddenly, she spots an orange M&M in the far corner of the room and scoots after it.
  • Josh Huang: In dogged pursuit of autism's off switch
    3 January 2008
    Comments ( 0 )
    In 1982, Josh Huang was an impressionable young biology undergraduate at Shanghaiʼs FuDan University. Like some of his fellow Chinese students, he knew he wanted to be a neuroscientist, but with limited access to scientific journals, had no idea which big questions were then at the forefront of research.
Sign Up for our weekly newsletter
Subscribe to RFA