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5 result(s) for "Crosson, Hope"
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Intranasal Oxytocin in Children and Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Intranasal oxytocin therapy has been used to improve various aspects of autism spectrum disorder on the basis of tenuous results from small studies. In a randomized trial involving 290 participants 3 to 17 years of age with autism spectrum disorder, daily use of oxytocin did not improve measures of social interaction as compared with placebo over a period of 24 weeks.
Left and right basal ganglia and frontal activity during language generation: Contributions to lexical, semantic, and phonological processes
fMRI was used to determine the frontal, basal ganglia, and thalamic structures engaged by three facets of language generation: lexical status of generated items, the use of semantic vs. phonological information during language generation, and rate of generation. During fMRI, 21 neurologically normal subjects performed four tasks: generation of nonsense syllables given beginning and ending consonant blends, generation of words given a rhyming word, generation of words given a semantic category at a fast rate (matched to the rate of nonsense syllable generation), and generation of words given a semantic category at a slow rate (matched to the rate of generating of rhyming words). Components of a left pre-SMA–dorsal caudate nucleus–ventral anterior thalamic loop were active during word generation from rhyming or category cues but not during nonsense syllable generation. Findings indicate that this loop is involved in retrieving words from pre-existing lexical stores. Relatively diffuse activity in the right basal ganglia (caudate nucleus and putamen) also was found during word-generation tasks but not during nonsense syllable generation. Given the relative absence of right frontal activity during the word generation tasks, we suggest that the right basal ganglia activity serves to suppress right frontal activity, preventing right frontal structures from interfering with language production. Current findings establish roles for the left and the right basal ganglia in word generation. Hypotheses are discussed for future research to help refine our understanding of basal ganglia functions in language generation. (JINS, 2003, 9, 1061–1077.)