Venue: Room 1123, Redmond Barry Building
Presenters: Dr Kristelle Hudry
Hudry’s research interests are in understanding the presentation of autism in early life, including how symptoms emerge over time and the extent to which these may be modifiable through early experiences, such as intervention. This talk will include an outline of changes in how researchers are thinking about autism and will show how two lines of Hudry’s own research – an intervention trial for pre-schoolers with autism and a prospective longitudinal study of infants at high-risk of autism – are converging toward a new study which has recently commenced in 2016.
Advances in our knowledge of when and how autism emerges early in life, and the extent to which the developmental course of this disorder is malleable, have implications both for developmental science and local policy, particularly given the establishment of the National Disability Insurance Scheme.
from
https://events.unimelb.edu.au/events/7436-how-malleable-is-autism
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