Ami Klin PhD
Professor (Adjunct) in the Child Study Center and Professor of Psychology

Departments & Organizations
Yale Medical GroupChild Study Center: Child & Adolescent Psychiatry Training Program | Adjunct Faculty
Biography
Ami Klin, Ph.D. is the Harris Professor of Child Psychology and Psychiatry at the Yale Child Study Center, Yale University School of Medicine. He directs the Autism Program at Yale, which is one of the designated National Institutes of Health Autism Centers of Excellence. This program includes a broad range of diagnostic and treatment services, and an interdisciplinary program of research that includes behavioral, brain, and genetics investigations. The program also provides training in a broad range of disciplines, and is strongly committed to advocacy at the local, national and international levels. Dr. Klin’s primary research activities focus on the social mind and the social brain, and on aspects of autism from infancy through adulthood. These studies include novel techniques such as the eye-tracking laboratories co-directed with Warren Jones, which allow researchers to see the world through the eyes of individuals with autism. These techniques are now being applied in the screening of babies at risk for autism in the Simons Laboratory of Social Neuroscience in Infancy. He is the author of over 180 publications in the field of autism and related conditions.Education
- Ph.D., University of London , 1988
Selected Publication
- Klin, A., Lin, D.J., Gorrindo, P., Ramsay, G., & Jones, W. (2009). Two-year-olds with autism fail to orient towards human biological motion but attend instead to non-social, physical contingencies. Nature, 459, 257-261.
Latest Honor and Recognition
- Researcher of the Year, “Healthcare Heroes”(2008) , Yale New Haven Hospital and ConnectiCare
Articles

Sept/Oct 2009
In Yale autism research, the eyes have it
Attaining a perplexing result in an experiment can be frustrating for scientists, but sometimes unexpected findings...

Aug/Sept 2005
A quest to detect earliest signs of autism
A recent issue of the journal Science with the theme “What Don’t We Know?” was organized around 125 of the most...


