Health
Brains of individuals with autism successfully encode facial emotions, study reveals – News-Medical.Net
A study that tested neural activity in the brains of individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) reveals that they successfully encode facial emotions in their…
A study that tested neural activity in the brains of individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) reveals that they successfully encode facial emotions in their neural signals – and they do so about as well as those without ASD. Led by researchers at Stony Brook University, the research suggests that the difficulties ASD individuals have reading facial emotions arise from problems in translating facial emotion information they have successfully encoded, not because their brains fail to do so…
-
Business22 hours agoTop brokers name 3 ASX shares to buy next week 16 November 2025
-
General10 hours agoZac Lomax released by Eels for ‘opportunities outside NRL’, fuelling speculation of R360 switch
-
Noosa News16 hours agoSenior constable injured in crash between unmarked police car and stolen vehicle in Pimpama, Queensland
-
General18 hours agoAccusations of secrecy, abuse of power fly as WA Labor wades through third term
