Neurological - Autism Research Institute https://autism.org/category/webinar/neurological/ Advancing Autism Research and Education Wed, 25 Mar 2026 22:39:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 COMPASS: A Caregiver–Teacher Partnership Model for Improving Outcomes in Autistic Children and Youth https://autism.org/compass-webinar/ Tue, 24 Mar 2026 21:20:39 +0000 https://autism.org/?p=24287 The Collaborative Model for Promoting Competence and Success (COMPASS) is an evidence-based consultation framework designed to enhance outcomes for autistic children and youth by strengthening caregiver–teacher partnerships. Developed by Ruble and colleagues, COMPASS emphasizes individualized education planning, shared decision-making, and implementation support across home and school contexts. The model

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The Collaborative Model for Promoting Competence and Success (COMPASS) is an evidence-based consultation framework designed to enhance outcomes for autistic children and youth by strengthening caregiver–teacher partnerships. Developed by Ruble and colleagues, COMPASS emphasizes individualized education planning, shared decision-making, and implementation support across home and school contexts. The model guides teams through structured goal setting, coaching, and progress monitoring aligned with the child’s strengths and needs and Individual Education Program. Empirical studies have shown that COMPASS improves intervention fidelity, child goal attainment, and collaborative engagement, making it a promising approach for bridging gaps between families and educators in autism support services.

Handouts of the slides are online HERE
Manuscript references (mentioned during the talk) are online HERE

About the speaker:

Dr. Lisa Ruble is the Earl F. Smith Distinguished Professor of Special Education and Autism at the Teachers College at Ball State University. Dr. Ruble teaches classes in autism and intervention. She is a past recipient of the New Investigator Award from NIMH. In 2002, Dr. Ruble established the STAR Program at the University of Louisville and, in 1998, helped establish TRIAD at Vanderbilt University. Her research program is based on these past experiences as a licensed psychologist, where she developed and provided social skills and behavioral interventions, school consultation and training, and parent training. These experiences influenced her interest in services research and the study of issues involved in the provision of evidence-based practices in community-based settings.

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Evidence That Speaks: Prioritizing Proven Communication Supports for Non-Speaking Autistic Children

January 6th, 2026|Back to School, Educational Therapies, Meltdowns, Neurological, Research, Research, School Issues, Sensory, Uncategorized, Webinar|

Connie Kasari, PhD, details what contemporary research reveals about supporting non-speaking or minimally verbal autistic children. She highlights how far the field has come in the past two decades and emphasizes the

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Gene Therapy for Mutations in the IQSEC2 Gene https://autism.org/gene-therapy-for-mutations-in-the-iqsec2-gene/ Tue, 17 Mar 2026 17:26:30 +0000 https://autism.org/?p=26949 The IQSEC2 protein is a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for Arf6.  Pathogenic variants in the X-linked IQSEC2 gene are associated with drug-resistant epilepsy, severe intellectual disability, and autism.  The vast majority of disease-causing variants introduce premature termination codons in the IQSEC2 gene, resulting in little or no IQSEC2 protein being

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The IQSEC2 protein is a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for Arf6.  Pathogenic variants in the X-linked IQSEC2 gene are associated with drug-resistant epilepsy, severe intellectual disability, and autism.  The vast majority of disease-causing variants introduce premature termination codons in the IQSEC2 gene, resulting in little or no IQSEC2 protein being produced.   We sought to determine if an adeno-associated virus (AAV) containing the IQSEC2 gene could rescue abnormal phenotypes in mice in two different Iqsec2 mouse models with premature Iqsec2 termination codons resulting in a knockout of Iqsec2 gene expression and in mice with a A350V Iqsec2 missense mutation.  In Iqsec2 knockout mice, the AAV significantly improved growth, corrected behavioral abnormalities, and normalized the seizure threshold.  We propose that success in the Iqsec2 knockout mice warrants a proof-of-concept study for gene replacement therapy in boys with IQSEC2 premature termination variants.

This is a joint presentation with the World Autism Organisation.

Originally published March 18, 2026

About the speaker:

Prof. Andrew Levy received his BA Summa Cum Laude from Yale University in Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry in 1982. He received a MSTP scholarship for his MD PHD training (1982-1990) at Johns Hopkins Medical School performing his PHD under Nobel Laureate Daniel Nathans working on the identification of a growth factor now known as Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor. He completed internal medicine residency at Johns Hopkins Hospital (1990-1992) and a cardiovascular fellowship at Brigham and Women’s Hospital at Harvard Medical School (1992-1996).  He is a tenured professor at Technion Faculty of Medicine, Technion Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, Israel. His current focus of research is on developing treatments for IQSEC2 disease – a neurodevelopmental disorder associated with drug-resistant epilepsy, autism, and severe intellectual disability. Founder of IQSEC2 Research and Advocacy Foundation, a volunteer group of parents working towards providing support for parents, increasing awareness of IQSEC2.

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Evidence That Speaks: Prioritizing Proven Communication Supports for Non-Speaking Autistic Children

January 6th, 2026|Back to School, Educational Therapies, Meltdowns, Neurological, Research, Research, School Issues, Sensory, Uncategorized, Webinar|

Connie Kasari, PhD, details what contemporary research reveals about supporting non-speaking or minimally verbal autistic children. She highlights how far the field has come in the past two decades and emphasizes the

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Understanding Autism through the Lens of Sensorimotor Features and Early-Developing Brain Regions https://autism.org/sensorimotor-features-and-early-developing-brain-regions/ Tue, 10 Mar 2026 18:37:28 +0000 https://autism.org/?p=23643 Sensorimotor differences are commonly reported in autistic individuals. However, the daily-life impact and neurobiological basis of motor differences are not clear. This talk will discuss sensorimotor differences commonly reported in autistic individuals, links to daily living skills, and links to early-developing brain structures like the brainstem. This talk will also

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Sensorimotor differences are commonly reported in autistic individuals. However, the daily-life impact and neurobiological basis of motor differences are not clear. This talk will discuss sensorimotor differences commonly reported in autistic individuals, links to daily living skills, and links to early-developing brain structures like the brainstem. This talk will also discuss the results of a motor intervention aimed to capitalize on neuroplasticity in autistic youth.

About the speaker:

Dr. Brittany G. Travers joined the faculty of University of Wisconsin-Madison in August of 2014 as an assistant professor in the Occupational Therapy Program in the Department of Kinesiology. In her first years as faculty, she has established a strong track record of independent funding and publication, and she was bestowed the Young Investigator Award by the International Society for Autism Research in May of 2016. Dr. Travers’s research program, housed at the Waisman Center on the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus (http://www.waisman.wisc.edu/motor), combines neuroimaging measures with quantitative measures of motor function, cognition, and daily living skills in individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders. Her work is inherently interdisciplinary, as Dr. Travers is a trained cognitive psychologist who received interdisciplinary postdoctoral training in developmental disorders and biomedical physics.

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Evidence That Speaks: Prioritizing Proven Communication Supports for Non-Speaking Autistic Children

January 6th, 2026|Back to School, Educational Therapies, Meltdowns, Neurological, Research, Research, School Issues, Sensory, Uncategorized, Webinar|

Connie Kasari, PhD, details what contemporary research reveals about supporting non-speaking or minimally verbal autistic children. She highlights how far the field has come in the past two decades and emphasizes the

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Towards the Development of a Diagnostic Test for Autism Spectrum Disorder: Data Science Meets Metabolomics https://autism.org/using-machine-learning-for-biomarker-discovery/ Tue, 10 Feb 2026 16:37:12 +0000 https://autism.org/?p=25368 Hear Juergen Hahn, Ph.D., ARI Scientific Advisory Board member, discuss how using machine learning can lead to biomarker discoveries in autism research. Handouts are online HERE About the speaker: Juergen Hahn, M.S., Ph.D. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Dr. Hahn's research focuses on the development of

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Hear Juergen Hahn, Ph.D., ARI Scientific Advisory Board member, discuss how using machine learning can lead to biomarker discoveries in autism research.

Handouts are online HERE

About the speaker:

Juergen Hahn, M.S., Ph.D. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Dr. Hahn’s research focuses on the development of new systems analysis techniques and their application in systems biology as well as for traditional chemical engineering processes. Special emphasis is placed on methods for nonlinear systems that can take into account significant levels of uncertainty in the model. Applications of these techniques include sensitivity analysis of signal transduction pathways, biomarker identification for autism spectrum disorder, model reduction for controller design, and experimental and sensor network design.

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Evidence That Speaks: Prioritizing Proven Communication Supports for Non-Speaking Autistic Children

January 6th, 2026|Back to School, Educational Therapies, Meltdowns, Neurological, Research, Research, School Issues, Sensory, Uncategorized, Webinar|

Connie Kasari, PhD, details what contemporary research reveals about supporting non-speaking or minimally verbal autistic children. She highlights how far the field has come in the past two decades and emphasizes the

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How Genetics is Shaping the Field of Autism Research https://autism.org/how-genetics-is-shaping-the-field-of-autism-research/ Tue, 27 Jan 2026 14:52:02 +0000 https://autism.org/?p=25068 Learn about how research on genetic influences is shaping our understanding of autism. About the speaker: M. Pilar Trelles, MD, is a licensed and certified child and adolescent psychiatrist. Dr. Trelles has expertise in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and related neurodevelopmental disabilities (NDDs) and

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Learn about how research on genetic influences is shaping our understanding of autism.

About the speaker:

Professional headshot of a person

M. Pilar Trelles, MD, is a licensed and certified child and adolescent psychiatrist. Dr. Trelles has expertise in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and related neurodevelopmental disabilities (NDDs) and has received specialized training in the utility of genomic medicine to better understand these conditions.

Dr. Trelles’ clinical and research work has been dedicated to improving access to care for under-resourced communities with NDDs. By establishing strong community partnerships with national and international stakeholders, she has developed initiatives that improve healthcare disparities and build capacities in the community to improve research participation of ethnic and racial minorities in ASD research. She has obtained significant grant support and has been the recipient of multiple awards for junior investigators. Dr. Trelles has published extensively in professional journals and has been invited frequently to present nationally and internationally.

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Evidence That Speaks: Prioritizing Proven Communication Supports for Non-Speaking Autistic Children

January 6th, 2026|Back to School, Educational Therapies, Meltdowns, Neurological, Research, Research, School Issues, Sensory, Uncategorized, Webinar|

Connie Kasari, PhD, details what contemporary research reveals about supporting non-speaking or minimally verbal autistic children. She highlights how far the field has come in the past two decades and emphasizes the

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Evidence That Speaks: Prioritizing Proven Communication Supports for Non-Speaking Autistic Children https://autism.org/research-on-language-use/ Tue, 06 Jan 2026 17:43:43 +0000 https://autism.org/?p=25472 Connie Kasari, PhD, details what contemporary research reveals about supporting non-speaking or minimally verbal autistic children. She highlights how far the field has come in the past two decades and emphasizes the need for contemporary research to focus on what strategies benefit whom and why. The speaker discusses JASPER, a modular intervention

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Connie Kasari, PhD, details what contemporary research reveals about supporting non-speaking or minimally verbal autistic children. She highlights how far the field has come in the past two decades and emphasizes the need for contemporary research to focus on what strategies benefit whom and why. The speaker discusses JASPER, a modular intervention based on social communication. She outlines recent studies and video examples showing positive language outcomes for JASPER on its own and in tandem with other interventions. Kasari underscores the usefulness of AAC devices in spoken language development, noting the lack of interventions that use even low-tech augmentative supports. The speaker summarizes her presentation and focus for future research before the Q&A.

Handouts are online HERE

In this webinar

2:00 – Early intervention in autism
7:00 – Core challenges: Video
14:16 – Study: JASPER intervention outcomes
26:00 – Intervention trajectories
31:50 – Study: Intervention combinations and AAC
36:11 – Implications for practice
45:45 – AAC case studies
46:45 – Summary
48:00 – Q&A

Early intervention and social communication

Kasari explains that nearly all autistic children will require support/intervention on engagement, imitation, joint attention, and play (2:00). She states that the goal of early intervention is to reduce the number of autistic children who have significant language impairment by the time they start school. Language ability remains one of the strongest predictors of positive long-term outcomes, making support strategies that target social communication skills—such as joint attention, engagement, and play—especially critical (4:00). Importantly, Kasari notes that research hasn’t focused on for whom an intervention works or why a particular intervention provides benefit for certain people. Understanding this is critical to expanding care and assessment across the board (5:30).

The speaker discusses core challenges that may trigger an intervention and shows videos comparing social communication in an autistic and a non-autistic child at 18 months old. Kasari highlights differences between the videos, noting the child with autism is more interested in looking at the objects than communicating (7:00). She explains how this pattern often translates to parent play, making it feel frustrating or not enjoyable for many parents/caregivers, and discusses two video examples of this (9:30).

Social Communication Research

The speaker says we know the least about children who are most delayed in development, who have limited language skills, and those whose families have less access to information about studies in their communities. She explains that most autistic children have never been in a research study. As a result, our evidence base does not represent the entire spectrum of autism (13:15). Kasari and her team focus on researching interventions for non-speaking and minimally verbal autistic children that can be conducted in community settings.

JASPER: Joint Attention, Symbolic Play, Engagement, and Regulation

The presenter describes JASPER, a comprehensive social communication/language intervention that can float inside other interventions, be used on its own or used sequentially (14:60). Kasari presents one of her recent publications comparing outcomes in 164 children, 3 -5 years old, across three sites after four months receiving Discrete Trial Training (DTT) or JASPER (video examples) (19:00). Results from the study show that both groups made significant language gains, and 45% moved toward phrased speech (putting words together).

Intervention trajectories

The goal of the intervention was to avoid the label of minimally verbal or profound autism by school age. Kasari defines profound autism as children with a developmental quotient (DQ) below 50, aged 8 or older, with poor adaptive skills (often minimally verbal or non-speaking). She notes that this is a relatively new term and considers how early we can predict these outcomes (26:00). The speaker reviews DQ data for a group of 264 children at very young ages. By age 8, 47% did not meet criteria for profound autism, although 25% of this group had a DQ lower than 50 at age 4 (28:30).

Kasari summarizes study takeaways, noting that DQ can help predict later development but is not a perfect predictor on its own. She reiterates the importance of early intervention and highlights understanding the 25% who moved off trajectory as a critical next step (29:25).

Combination interventions and assistive technology (AAC)

The presenter reiterates the heterogeneity in response to interventions, underscoring the need to personalize, tailor, and target interventions according to each person. This will also help us address for whom the intervention works and why. Kasari defines adaptive intervention designs as a sequence of decision rules that specify whether, how, when (timing), and based on which measures, to alter the dosage (duration, frequency, or amount), type, or delivery of treatment(s) at decision stages in the course of care – this is what her group employs (29:45).

Kasari details a study with 61 children, 5-8 years old, who are minimally verbal and had received 2 years of intensive early intervention (most ABA). All children received JASPER plus EMT, a spoken language intervention. Half of the children were randomized to receive AAC devices to test if these supports help with spoken language. Children attended two sessions per week, and at the 12-week follow-up, those assessed as slow responders were re-randomized to either add AAC or to up to 3 sessions per week. Outcomes for socially communicative utterances were assessed after another 12 weeks (31:50). Those who used AAC devices from the beginning showed significant increases and also had more novel words and joint attention language. Those with only JASPER and EMT made slow but steady progress. Researchers also found that from entry to midpoint to exit, parent-initiated engagement stayed the same while child-initiated engagement increased (34:15).

Implications for practice

The speaker notes that assistive technology are still not used regularly with children, be it a device, sign language, or another low-tech augmentative device; they are not being used as much as they should (36:11). Kasari returns to the child from the first video and describes how they changed tactics the second day by lowering the play level and adding an AAC device with button-words (video provided) (40:00). She notes that this child entered regular education at age 7, speaking full sentences. He used the AAC for a few years as a transition to spoken language. The presenter describes another case in which a child used AAC to support communication. He made progress over time, eventually asking the therapist to put phrases that he hears in the AAC device so he can listen to them and learn the sounds. In a follow-up video, the child is speaking in full sentences (45:45).

Kasari summarizes her presentation, highlighting that we can improve social communication and language outcomes for delayed autistic children and that these early skills need to be direct targets for support/intervention strategies. She reiterates how research must inform practice and, therefore, focus on answering questions about personalized interventions (how long do we wait, what do we change to?) (46:45) before the Q&A (48:00).

Since 1990, Connie Kasari, Ph.D., has been on the faculty at UCLA, where she teaches both graduate and undergraduate courses and has been the primary advisor to more than 70 Ph.D. students. She is a founding member of the Center for Autism Research and Treatment at UCLA. Her research aims at the development of novel, evidence-tested interventions implemented in community settings. Recent projects include targeted treatments for early social communication development in at-risk infants, toddlers, and preschoolers with autism, and peer relationships for school-aged children with autism. She has led many multi-site federally funded projects investigating the efficacy of interventions for children with autism and other neurodevelopmental conditions. She is on the science advisory board of the Autism Speaks Foundation and regularly presents to both academic and practitioner audiences locally, nationally, and internationally.

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Breakthroughs in Understanding roles of Genes and Environment in Autism https://autism.org/breakthroughs-in-understanding-roles-of-genes-and-environment-in-autism/ Tue, 02 Dec 2025 15:59:31 +0000 https://autism.org/?p=25365 About the speaker: Dr. Jonathan Sebat, Director, Beyster Center for Psychiatric Genomics Dr. Sebat leads an interdisciplinary team in the clinical and genomic analysis of patient cohorts at UCSD and Rady Children’s Hospital. He is a Professor at the University of California San Diego with

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About the speaker:

Dr. Jonathan Sebat, Director, Beyster Center for Psychiatric Genomics

Dr. Sebat leads an interdisciplinary team in the clinical and genomic analysis of patient cohorts at UCSD and Rady Children’s Hospital. He is a Professor at the University of California San Diego with appointments in the departments of Psychiatry and Cellular & Molecular Medicine.

Take the knowledge quiz

Can’t see the quiz below? Take it online HERE

Evidence That Speaks: Prioritizing Proven Communication Supports for Non-Speaking Autistic Children

January 6th, 2026|Back to School, Educational Therapies, Meltdowns, Neurological, Research, Research, School Issues, Sensory, Uncategorized, Webinar|

Connie Kasari, PhD, details what contemporary research reveals about supporting non-speaking or minimally verbal autistic children. She highlights how far the field has come in the past two decades and emphasizes the

The post Breakthroughs in Understanding roles of Genes and Environment in Autism appeared first on Autism Research Institute.

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Sleep Disturbances and their Behavioral Correlates in Autistic Youth and Youth with Co-Occurring ADHD https://autism.org/sleep-and-behavior-nair-2025/ Tue, 11 Nov 2025 22:12:44 +0000 https://autism.org/?p=25354 Take the knowledge quiz HERE Handouts are available HERE Learn about how sleep disturbances correlate with behavior in autistic youth, including those with co-occurring ADHD. Originally published November 12, 2025 About the speaker: Dr. Aarti Nair is a licensed and board-certified

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Take the knowledge quiz HERE

Handouts are available HERE

Learn about how sleep disturbances correlate with behavior in autistic youth, including those with co-occurring ADHD.

Originally published November 12, 2025

About the speaker:

Dr. Aarti Nair is a licensed and board-certified neuropsychologist with over 15 years of experience working in the field. She specializes in assessment and consultation of neurodevelopmental disabilities across the lifespan. She currently holds a tenure-track faculty position in the Department of Psychology at Loma Linda University, with a focus on translational research studies in youth with autism and psychosis. She is specifically interested in applying multimodal neuroimaging techniques (functional and structural MRI, and magnetic resonance spectroscopy) to examine changes in neural architecture affected by targeted interventions in these populations.

Dr. Nair is originally from Mumbai, India and moved to California in 2010 after a few years training on the east coast. LA is now home to her and she spends her free time exploring the many restaurants in the city, checking out all the concert venues LA has to offer, and travelling whenever she can.

Evidence That Speaks: Prioritizing Proven Communication Supports for Non-Speaking Autistic Children

January 6th, 2026|Back to School, Educational Therapies, Meltdowns, Neurological, Research, Research, School Issues, Sensory, Uncategorized, Webinar|

Connie Kasari, PhD, details what contemporary research reveals about supporting non-speaking or minimally verbal autistic children. She highlights how far the field has come in the past two decades and emphasizes the

The post Sleep Disturbances and their Behavioral Correlates in Autistic Youth and Youth with Co-Occurring ADHD appeared first on Autism Research Institute.

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Animal Models of Autism Spectrum Disorder: Foundations for Translational Therapeutic Research https://autism.org/animal-models/ Tue, 28 Oct 2025 22:57:12 +0000 https://autism.org/?p=22286 Adrien Eshraghi, MD, MSc, FACS, a 2022 ARI grant recipient, discusses the ongoing translational research conducted in his lab. About the speaker: Dr. Adrien Eshraghi is board certified in Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery. He is Board Certified in Neurotology. He served as the

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Adrien Eshraghi, MD, MSc, FACS, a 2022 ARI grant recipient, discusses the ongoing translational research conducted in his lab.

About the speaker:

Dr. Adrien Eshraghi is board certified in Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery. He is Board Certified in Neurotology. He served as the past President of the Florida Society of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery.

His training and experience at Sorbonne University in Paris, UCLA, and University of Miami encompasses medical, surgical, holistic, and integrative approaches to disease management. By combining these approaches, he provides comprehensive management of Ear and Hearing Disorders (Otology and Neurotology)

He is a surgeon-scientist with over 200 scientific papers published (H-Index 50), over 500 presentations at national and international scientific meetings. He is selected by his peers to be one of the “Top Doctors” and “Best Doctors in America” yearly since 2012. He is ranked as one of the Top 2% Scientists in 2024 that are leading the minds in science (Stanford University Top’s 2% Scientist List in the world).

Take the knowledge quiz

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Evidence That Speaks: Prioritizing Proven Communication Supports for Non-Speaking Autistic Children

January 6th, 2026|Back to School, Educational Therapies, Meltdowns, Neurological, Research, Research, School Issues, Sensory, Uncategorized, Webinar|

Connie Kasari, PhD, details what contemporary research reveals about supporting non-speaking or minimally verbal autistic children. She highlights how far the field has come in the past two decades and emphasizes the

The post Animal Models of Autism Spectrum Disorder: Foundations for Translational Therapeutic Research appeared first on Autism Research Institute.

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Language and Communication Issues in Autism: Let’s Talk About Talking https://autism.org/language-and-communication-issues-in-autism-lets-talk-about-talking/ Mon, 27 Oct 2025 13:15:48 +0000 https://autism.org/?p=25204 Handouts are available HERE You can take the knowledge quiz HERE Difficulties with language and communication are one of the defining features of autism. We’ll investigate language peculiarities and development in autism from the perspective of different sensory perceptual processes and cognitive styles; then we can see

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ari wao joint logo

Handouts are available HERE

You can take the knowledge quiz HERE

Difficulties with language and communication are one of the defining features of autism. We’ll investigate language peculiarities and development in autism from the perspective of different sensory perceptual processes and cognitive styles; then we can see that autistic (including non-verbal) people do communicate (though sometimes their attempts to transmit information are unnoticed by their non-autistic communicative partners); they do not lack communicative intent but rather often use unconventional means of communication.

To communicate successfully, we have to speak the same language. Teaching autistic children ‘our’ language is not good enough; we have to learn ‘their’ language(s) and communication systems as well.

This is a joint webinar with the World Autism Organization.

About the speaker:

Prof. Olga Bogdashina, Ph.D. (linguistics), MSc (Psychology), MA (Teaching methods) MA Ed (Autism), Honorary Professor, Honorary Doctor, KSPU, Co-founder of the International Autism Institute, and Programme Leader (Autism courses), Visiting Professor in Autism Studies, author of 9 books that reflect her specific interests in autism research: sensory perceptual issues in autism; language and communication in autism; autism and spirituality.

Having founded the first day centre for autistic children in Gorlovka,  Ukraine over 30 years ago, she has ‘lived and breathed autism’ since then. However, before 1988 – she knew absolutely nothing about autism or just how much it would mean to her and change her life.

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