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Editor’s Note: The name of one of the conference’s
presenters, Carol Goossens’, is spelled correctly.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – A communications disorders expert credited
with identifying some of the earliest warning signs of autism in
toddlers is among those scheduled to present at the third annual
Alabama Autism Conference at The University of Alabama, Jan. 30.
Dr. Amy Wetherby, the L. L. Schendel Professor of Communication
Disorders and director of Florida State University’s Center
for Autism and Related Disorders, is among those presenting at the
conference, which convenes at 8:15 a.m. following a one hour registration
period.
The theme for this year’s conference is “Communication
and Language in Autism Spectrum Disorders.” All sessions will
be held at UA’s Bryant Conference Center. Registration is
$140 per person. Student and group registration discounts are available.
Last year’s conference attracted more than 600 people, including
a mix of medical, mental health and educational professionals, along
with parents. Registration, and other information, for the conference
is available at http://pmdp.ccs.ua.edu.
Click on “Health & Human Services” and follow links.
For registration by telephone, dial 205/348-3000.
People with autism experience extreme difficulties in social interaction.
Delays in language development and obsessive interests in routine
behaviors are characteristics of people with autism. Its cause is
unknown and, according to the Autism Society of America, as many
as 1.5 million Americans are believed to have some form of autism.
Government agencies estimate the number of people with autism is
growing at a rate of 10-17 percent annually.
In one research project, Wetherby pored over hundreds of hours
of videotaped sessions of young children interacting with their
parents and a member of her staff in specially designed situations.
Over the course of the multi-year project, Wetherby identified
nine early warning signs in children, ages 13 months to 24 months,
who would later be identified as having delays linked to autism.
An awareness of these early warning signs could enable pediatricians
and parents to seek earlier treatment for children. Earlier treatments
have been shown to result in improved outcomes for children with
autism, but autism has been difficult to diagnose prior to age 3
and often isn’t diagnosed until adolescence.
Presenters at the conference, which is co-chaired by Dr. Laura
Klinger, associate professor of psychology at UA, and Meredy Hogue
and Philip Young, both of the Autism Society of Alabama, will also
include:
Klinger; Carol Gray, director of The Gray Center for Social Learning
and Understanding in Michigan; Dr. Helen Tager Flusberg, professor
in the department of anatomy and neurobiology at Boston University
School of Medicine and director of the Lab of Developmental Cognitive
Neuroscience; and Carol Goossens’, a speech/language pathologist
and special educator in private practice in New York City.
Jerimie Goike, an adult diagnosed with autism, will give a luncheon
talk at 12:15 p.m. on Jan. 30.
Two pre-conference workshops will also be held Jan. 29, beginning
with a noon registration. Participants may choose one of the two
to attend. Registration for the workshop is $75. One of the workshops
will be led by Wetherby and the other by Dr. Mary E. Van Bourgondien,
professor and director of Raleigh TEACCH Center of the University
of North Carolina.
Klinger is a clinical child psychologist, in UA’s College
of Arts and Sciences, who has worked with children with autism for
some 20 years. She is conducting a National Institute of Health-sponsored
research project to examine how children with autism think differently
from children with typical development. She directs a Pervasive
Development Disorders clinic located on campus that provides diagnostic
evaluations and treatment services for children with autism and
other pervasive developmental disorders such as Asperger’s
Syndrome.
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