There is hope that biomarkers based on non-invasive and economical technologies, such as eye-tracking and EEG, could serve as adjuncts to clinical tools. These methods might contribute as screening tools to determine which children would benefit from a more thorough diagnostic evaluation or enhancing a clinician's confidence. This focused research may lead to significant advances in the coming years.
Yale is a hub for collaborative autism research across different disciplines. At the Center for Brain and Mind Health, experts from Yale Child Study Center, neurology, neurosurgery, and other fields work together. My own research group has partnered with the Yale Biomedical Imaging Institute and the Positron Emission Tomography Center to discover novel molecular differences in the brains of autistic people. Two important papers were published in the past two years, showing that the brains of autistic people have different kinds of building blocks—they differ in neurotransmitters and synapses.
This is just one example of the interdisciplinary research that is advancing autism at Yale. Collaborators in the Department of Neurosurgery have recently launched an ambitious and innovative undertaking to learn how recordings taken from inside the brain of epilepsy surgery patients could help us understand language in autism.
We have a large and diverse group of people and professions working together to understand autism at Yale in a way that has never been the case before, as we are making unprecedented progress. When I came here in 2004, I wouldn't have imagined collaborating with neurosurgeons, yet I am doing just that. Yale is a unique place with a uniquely collaborative environment. This multidisciplinary approach will prove vital for advancing our knowledge and treatment of autism.