Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Autism as a neural systems disorder: A theory of frontal-posterior underconnectivity

Publication year: 2012
Source: Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, Available online 14 February 2012
Marcel Adam Just, Timothy A. Keller, Vicente L. Malave, Rajesh K. Kana, Sashank Varma
The underconnectivity theory of autism attributes the disorder to lower anatomical and functional systems connectivity between frontal and more posterior cortical processing. Here we review evidence for the theory and present a computational model of an executive functioning task (Tower of London) implementing the assumptions of underconnectivity. We make two modifications to a previous computational account of performance and brain activity in typical individuals in the Tower of London task (): (1) the communication bandwidth between frontal and parietal areas was decreased and (2) the posterior centers were endowed with more executive capability (i.e., more autonomy, an adaptation is proposed to arise in response to the lowered frontal-posterior bandwidth). The autism model succeeds in matching the lower frontal-posterior functional connectivity (lower synchronization of activation) seen in fMRI data, as well as providing insight into behavioral response time results. The theory provides a unified account of how a neural dysfunction can produce a neural systems disorder and a psychological disorder with the widespread and diverse symptoms of autism.

Highlights

► Our theory attributes autism to impaired frontal-posterior brain connectivity. ► We present functional and structural brain imaging and behavioral evidence. ► We model underconnectivity with frontal-posterior bandwidth constraints. ► We account for language and social deficits and perceptual sparing in autism. ► We account for individual differences in functional connectivity in autism.





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