Spotted around the web: Week of 25 February 2019

Here is a roundup of news and research for the week of 25 February.

By Jill Adams, Knvul Sheikh
1 March 2019 | 2 min read
This article is more than five years old.
Neuroscience—and science in general—is constantly evolving, so older articles may contain information or theories that have been reevaluated since their original publication date.

Research roundup

  • Only 41 peer-reviewed studies from 1980 to 2017 have tested intervention programs for autistic adults, according to a meta-analysis. Current Psychiatry Reports
  • Researchers report on progress and remaining challenges in the development of noninvasive biosensors that use saliva, tears or sweat to estimate blood levels of various substances. Nature Biotechnology
  • There appears to be no correlation between any of 25 different endocrine disruptors in pregnant women and autism or intellectual disability diagnoses in their babies. Epidemiology
  • Using electroencephalography to monitor brain activity, scientists may be able to predict seizures moments before they occur. Science Translational Medicine
  • A new study takes a qualitative look at what it’s like to be a girl or woman with autism. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders
  • Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder is more commonly associated with autism in girls than in boys, according to a population study in Denmark. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
  • Researchers describe different baseline activity levels in various mouse models of autism.  Neurobiology of Learning and Memory

Science and society

  • More than 40 percent of women scientists in the United States leave their careers or go part-time after they become parents. Nature
  • An autism expert describes how parents and caregivers can minimize the risks of children ‘eloping,’ or wandering away from the safety of their home or school. Forbes
  • In an office where people on the spectrum are the majority, employees don’t have to second-guess social cues in meetings, the tone of their emails or whether they’ll offend others with their repetitive movements. New York Times Magazine
  • Autistic writer Sara Luterman challenges the prevailing narrative that raising a child with autism usually breaks a marriage. The Washington Post

Autism and the arts

  • Actor Freddie Highmore talks about playing a character with autism on the prime-time television show “The Good Doctor.” Good Morning America
  • An Illinois art gallery that features artists with autism hosts its first solo exhibit, presenting wood carvings by Barry Lorberbaum. Daily Journal

Publishing

  • The preprint model of publishing offers benefits for early-career researchers. PLOS Biology