The Autism Brain Is Different, with Dr. Manuel Casanova
This is the first of three episodes featuring autism expert and polymath Dr. Manuel Casanova, who recently retired after an illustrious career in neuroscience and neuroanatomy. The author of 18 books and innumerable papers, Dr. Casanova is known for his pioneering work identifying abnormalities of neural growth and migration in developing autism brains, and irregularities in connectivity and the critical excitation-inhibition balance. He is also known for his work discovering abnormalities of "minicolumns" in the cerebral cortex. They also discuss the prospects for a true biomarker of autism. In this somewhat technical discussion he explores the pathologies seen in autism brains with host Jill Escher. Brought to you by the National Council on Severe Autism Website: NCSAutism.org

Autism Controversies, with Dr. Manuel Casanova

Temple Grandin: "The Autistic Brain"

Why Evolution Split Your Brain In Half – Brain Asymmetry with Jim Al-Khalili

What Level 1 Autism Really Means: It’s Not Just “Mild Autism”

Locked in and Screaming: What Neuroscience can say about Autistic Inertia

How to Spot Autism in High-Masking Adults

Simon Baron-Cohen: Autism and the male brain

Female Autism Expert: What Female Autism REALLY Looks Like (It's not what you think)

And if it was Autism? Adult Autism without Intellectual Disability: Key Facts. B.Grosjean. MD.

Autism: A view from neuroscience - A CCN public lecture

The Autistic Brain: Thinking Across the Spectrum | Dr. Temple Grandin | Talks at Google

Autism: An evolutionary perspective, Professor Simon Baron-Cohen, 1st Symposium of EPSIG, 2016

Hypermobility, POTS + ADHD, Autism, ND Connection with Leading Expert Dr Jessica Eccles

Why Autism Isn't A Disorder (It's A Different Brain) - Simon Baron-Cohen

Neurodivergent Doctor explains Autism problems with interoception. Do you notice what is happening?

The Autistic Brain: Thinking Across the Spectrum

A conversation with an autistic person (with Megan Neff)

Dr. Julie Kim discusses how MeRT can help those with Autism

Network Neuroscience of Autism

