This action requires you to be registered with Frontiers and logged in. To register or login click here.
Please indicate why this content is being reported:
Your message has been sent to the Frontiers Administration Office and will be dealt with as soon as possible.
Filming date: 12 Oct 2012
Location: Rutgers University, Sensory-Motor Integration Lab
Contributors/Organisations: Rutgers University, NSF, NJ Governor's Council for the treatment of autism
Science > Neuroscience > Behavioral Neuroscience Archive
Science > Neuroscience > Developmental Neuroscience
Science > Neuroscience > Human Neuroscience Archive
Science > Neuroscience > Integrative Neuroscience
Science > Psychology > Biological Psychology
Science > Psychology > Clinical Psychology
Science > Psychology > Cognition
Science > Psychology > Cognitive Science
Science > Psychology > Comparative Psychology
Science > Psychology > Developmental Psychology
Science > Psychology > Movement Science
Science > Psychology > Psychology for Clinical Settings
Science > Statistics > Biometrics
Science > Statistics > Statistical Mechanics and Structure of Matter
Health > Pediatrics > Genetics of Common and Rare Diseases
Health > Psychiatry > Adolescents and Emerging Adults
Health > Rehabilitation Sciences > Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Health > Rehabilitation Sciences > Intervention Psychiatry
Engineering
Humanities and Social Sciences
Keywords: autism, objective metrics, diagnosis, Treatment, Shank3, Phelan-McDermid Syndrome, Pain, Movement, Somatosensation
Posted by: Elizabeth B Torres
Posted on: 22 Oct 2012
You are in
Behavioral Neuroscience Archive
NSF I-Corps 2014 Michigan Cohort Team 341: Lessons Learned Video
Elizabeth B Torres
NSF I-Corps 2014 Michigan Cohort Team 341: Technical Video
Reinforcement Learning Interface Therapy for Autism
What is Neuromorphic Engineering
Giacomo Indiveri
Farmacogenomica - Istituto di Ricerca per il Cancro di Candiolo - TGR Piemonte
Federica Di Nicolantonio
Serotonin and IBS
Gary M Mawe
Surfaces sonores (auditory perception of 3D surfaces)
Sylvain Hanneton
Typical and Atypical Development of the Kinesthetic Percept: Noisy, Random and Restricted Proprioception in Autism
Javascript is disabled. Please enable Javascript in your browser settings in order to see all the content on this page.