Globally, 1 in 68 children are affected with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Early detection and intervention can help people with ASD improve the quality of life.

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The quality of life for people with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) can be improved through functional behavoir assessment and by detecting early.
Now, Robert Emerson and colleagues linked reliable measures of brain connectivity in six month-old infants to a later ASD diagnosis at two years of age with almost 100% accuracy.
The scientists scanned the brains of 59 infants with high familial risk for ASD while they were sleeping, and collected data on 26,335 pairs of functional connections between 230 different brain regions using an imaging technique called functional connectivity magnetic resonance imaging (fcMRI).
Of the 59 infants, 11 went on to be diagnosed with ASD at 24 months of age, which enabled the researchers to apply machine-learning algorithms to parse out specific brain patterns that correctly predicted nine of the 11 diagnoses without any false positives.
Although future work is needed to determine if the signature applies to infants without high genetic risk, the authors say their findings may be first step towards much-needed early detection measures for ASD.
Source-Eurekalert
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