All Relations between Autism Spectrum Disorder and affective value

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
K A Loveland, B Tunali-Kotoski, Y R Chen, J Ortegon, D A Pearson, K A Brelsford, M C Gibb. Emotion recognition in autism: verbal and nonverbal information. Development and psychopathology. vol 9. issue 3. 1997-12-15. PMID:9327241. results suggested that persons with autistic spectrum disorders can use affective information from multiple sources in much the same ways as persons of comparable developmental level without autism. 1997-12-15 2023-08-12 human
A Gena, P J Krantz, L E McClannahan, C L Poulso. Training and generalization of affective behavior displayed by youth with autism. Journal of applied behavior analysis. vol 29. issue 3. 1996-11-08. PMID:8926222. training and generalization of affective behavior displayed by youth with autism. 1996-11-08 2023-08-12 human
A Gena, P J Krantz, L E McClannahan, C L Poulso. Training and generalization of affective behavior displayed by youth with autism. Journal of applied behavior analysis. vol 29. issue 3. 1996-11-08. PMID:8926222. the purpose of this study was to teach contextually appropriate affective behavior to 4 youths with autism. 1996-11-08 2023-08-12 human
L Waterhouse, D Fein, C Modah. Neurofunctional mechanisms in autism. Psychological review. vol 103. issue 3. 1996-10-16. PMID:8759044. behavioral impairments in autism are theorized to result from abnormal neuronal organization in brain development generating 4 systemically related neurofunctional impairments: (a) canalesthesia, wherein abnormal hippocampal system function "canalizes" sensory records, disrupting integration of information; (b) impaired assignment of the affective significance of stimuli, wherein abnormal amygdaloid system function disrupts affect association; (c) asociality, wherein impaired oxytocin system function flattens social bonding and affiliativeness; and (d) extended selective attention, wherein abnormal organization of temporal and parietal polysensory regions yields aberrant overprocessing of primary representations. 1996-10-16 2023-08-12 human
D Tantam, D Holmes, C Cordes. Nonverbal expression in autism of Asperger type. Journal of autism and developmental disorders. vol 23. issue 1. 1993-05-03. PMID:8463192. we suggest that the gaze avoidance of autism may in actuality be a lack of expected gaze (e.g., gaze when the other person is talking) rather than an absolute avoidance, and suggest that a lifelong absence of gaze response to social cues including speech could explain a number of the developmental features of autism including lack of joint attention with others, lack of understanding and affective response to others, and poor discrimination of facial expressions. 1993-05-03 2023-08-12 human
P P Wang, J R Hesselink, T L Jernigan, S Doherty, U Bellug. Specific neurobehavioral profile of Williams' syndrome is associated with neocerebellar hemispheric preservation. Neurology. vol 42. issue 10. 1992-11-17. PMID:1407582. they contrast with the neocerebellar vermal hypoplasia seen in autism, with its communicative and affective deficits. 1992-11-17 2023-08-11 human
S Baron-Cohe. Do people with autism understand what causes emotion? Child development. vol 62. issue 2. 1991-07-29. PMID:2055129. the implications of these results for the affective and meta-representation theories of autism are discussed. 1991-07-29 2023-08-11 human
A S Walters, R P Barrett, C Feinstei. Social relatedness and autism: current research, issues, directions. Research in developmental disabilities. vol 11. issue 3. 1990-10-16. PMID:2204968. this shift to regarding disturbances in social relatedness as one of the defining manifestations of the disorder marks the movement of research on autistic disorder back to its origins, when kanner first noted the "social and affective" symptoms of autism as pathognomonic. 1990-10-16 2023-08-11 Not clear
A S Walters, R P Barrett, C Feinstei. Social relatedness and autism: current research, issues, directions. Research in developmental disabilities. vol 11. issue 3. 1990-10-16. PMID:2204968. further, there has been a recent proliferation of research designed to document the nature of social deficit in autism, and whether it is primarily affective, communicative, or cognitive in nature, or involves some combination of these three variables. 1990-10-16 2023-08-11 Not clear
B Olsson, A Ret. A review of the Rett syndrome with a theory of autism. Brain & development. vol 12. issue 1. 1990-06-28. PMID:2344005. signs of concordance between the extremely low mental, affective and motor developmental levels, such as in the expression of the eyes, are a prominent feature of rs, whereas signs of higher cortical functions that are in contrast with insufficient relations to objects, people and space are a prominent characteristic in autism. 1990-06-28 2023-08-11 Not clear
B Olsson, A Ret. A review of the Rett syndrome with a theory of autism. Brain & development. vol 12. issue 1. 1990-06-28. PMID:2344005. on the basis of the clinical findings a theory is proposed, according to which there exists a system for involuntary contributions to the affective engagement in perception, which is insufficiently developed in autism and in earlier stages of rs. 1990-06-28 2023-08-11 Not clear
S Baron-Cohe. Social and pragmatic deficits in autism: cognitive or affective? Journal of autism and developmental disorders. vol 18. issue 3. 1988-11-23. PMID:3049519. social and pragmatic deficits in autism: cognitive or affective? 1988-11-23 2023-08-11 Not clear
S Baron-Cohe. Social and pragmatic deficits in autism: cognitive or affective? Journal of autism and developmental disorders. vol 18. issue 3. 1988-11-23. PMID:3049519. although the affective theory makes better sense of the results from emotional recognition tasks, the cognitive theory predicts the particular pattern of impaired and unimpaired social skills in autism, as well as the pragmatic deficits. 1988-11-23 2023-08-11 Not clear
J M Rumsey, N C Andreasen, J L Rapopor. Thought, language, communication, and affective flattening in autistic adults. Archives of general psychiatry. vol 43. issue 8. 1986-08-19. PMID:3729672. subtypes of thought disorder and affective flattening were examined in 14 adults with clear dsm-iii diagnoses of infantile autism or autism, residual state, using videotaped psychiatric interviews and objective rating scales. 1986-08-19 2023-08-11 human
A M DesLaurier. The cognitive--affective dilemma in early infantile autism: the case of Clarence. Journal of autism and childhood schizophrenia. vol 8. issue 2. 1978-09-30. PMID:670132. the cognitive--affective dilemma in early infantile autism: the case of clarence. 1978-09-30 2023-08-11 Not clear
A M DesLaurier. The cognitive--affective dilemma in early infantile autism: the case of Clarence. Journal of autism and childhood schizophrenia. vol 8. issue 2. 1978-09-30. PMID:670132. the case of clarence is seen as lending support to the thesis of deslauriers and carlson (1969), who maintain that the core problem in infantile autism is a disturbance of affective contact. 1978-09-30 2023-08-11 Not clear