Sensory Differences: Research at IMFAR
November 5, 2008 by Kristina Chew, PhD
Filed under Health
Sensory processing is the topic of a presentation at the May 20089 IMFAR conference (International Meeting for Autism Research), as well as of a number of poster presentations. Here’s the description for a segment (#148 in the Program Book) on “Sensory Processing:The Interface of Research and Clinical Practice”:
Sensory differences are commonly reported in people with autism. Often they are among the most problematic symptoms. This symposium will examine the phenomenon of sensory symptomatology, the research methodology used to characterize and explain the observed behaviors, and the treatments that are being used in the community. A translational approach will be …read more
Body Ownership: Is That Really Your Hand Moving?
September 2, 2008 by Kristina Chew, PhD
Filed under Health
Body ownership is the feeling that your body belongs to you and is there constantly; vision, and other sensory signals, contribute to it. A sense of body ownership is often disrupted, the September 2nd Science Daily notes, in “a range of different neurological, psychiatric and psychological conditions, such as after a stroke, in autism, epilepsy, anorexia, and bulimia.” Body awareness and body ownership are two things that, I suspect Charlie has not always had, or had in the way that a “typical” child might. We had to teach him to put his hands in front of him to catch his …read more




