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Mothers with Infants Invited to Participate in Two Autism Studies

Title: Mothers with Infants Invited to Participate in Two Autism Studies

Description

Researchers at the University of Connecticut are looking for pregnant mothers and mothers with infants to participate in two research initiatives that will follow the development of infant siblings of children with autism over the first two years of life.

These studies are being conducted by Deborah Fein, a UConn Board of Trustees distinguished professor of psychology and nationally-recognized leader in autism research, and Anjana Bhat, an assistant professor in UConn's Neag School of Education who studies developmental disorders in infants and children.

The UConn IRB has approved these studies, Protocol #'s: H08-234 and H08-111.

 

Who Can Participate

  • Younger siblings of children with autism between 16 and 30 months of age may be eligible to participate in the Early Detection Sibling Study.
  • Infant siblings of children with autism between 3 and 12 months of age may be eligible to participate in the Infant Learning Study and may continue to participate in the Early Detection Sibling Study after 16 months of age.

 

 What the Early Detection Sibling Study Involves

  • Professor Fein and her research team are studying the use of a developmental screener to see how well it works with younger siblings of children with an autism spectrum disorder.
  • Parents of eligible younger siblings will complete developmental questionnaires for their younger child when he/she is aged 18 months and 24 months.  Parents will also be asked to complete a behavioral questionnaire for their older child.
  • Some families will be given a follow-up phone interview and asked to come to the University of Connecticut-Storrs to receive a free developmental and diagnostic evaluation.

 

 What the Infant Learning Study Involves

  • You and your infant will visit Assistant Professor Bhat's lab twice or someone from the lab will visit your home twice when your infant in 3, 6, 9, 12, and 15 months for a total of 10 visits.  Each visit lasts 1-1.5 hours.
  • You and your infant will participate in a number of play-oriented, structured activities.
  • You will receive a few questionnaires to follow-up on your child's development when your child is 18 and 24 months.  A researcher may also conduct a phone interview to confirm your responses.
  • If you live far away and we cannot drive to you, you can still participate in our research study via skype videochat sessions and by filling out parent questionnaires.  We will provide you a testing kit to accomplish the web-based assessments at each age.

 

How You Can Help

You can help by volunteering for the studies.  If you have questions on the Early Detection Sibling Study, please call the study office at (860) 486-5767.

If you have questions on the Infant Learning Study, please call the Infant Development Lab at (860) 486-0019 or email to anjana.bhat@uconn.edu

 

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Angela DeRusha April 30, 2013 at 12:11 pm
Hey Kyle, if we can get enough people I am will to do a 6 or 6:30am class as well as a 6:30pm class.Read More The cost per class is between $15-20 (depending on the size of the class) the more people the lower the individual cost.
Kyle Christine Smith April 30, 2013 at 12:00 pm
do you have any more information?
Phony Jones April 30, 2013 at 04:11 pm
Fair usage of public roads is fine, the main issue at hand is that the design of the new bike linesRead More on Jewel Ave is just poor and unsafe for all parties involved. On the eastbound Jewel Ave road heading towards Main St, the bike like is just haphazardly running along next to the merge lane to the GCP westbound lane, meaning vehicle traffic cuts directly across the new bike lane when getting onto a highway. This is very dangerous since because there are only 2 lanes now on the eastbound Jewel road the right lane becomes the de-facto bus lane for the Q65. That bus moves pretty quick in general. Any driver attempting to make the merge onto the GCP west with a bike rider directly in the merge/bike lane combined with a fast, slow to brake bus behind them will be hard pressed to slow down in time and not cause some kind of accident. Why would anybody design that kind of traffic pattern, it's dangerous and reckless. It's not much better going on the Westbound Jewel Ave Road since that bike lane also merges with the GCP exit ramp with cars exiting from highway speed. It is not a safe traffic pattern at all for anyone. Aside from that, the westbound bike lane just sort ends abruptly there as well, leaving bicyclists basically at the end of an off-ramp without a clear traffic lane. They really should have thought out the placement and layout before somebody gets hurt, especially as the weather becomes better and we see more mixed usage on the road.
el jefe April 29, 2013 at 03:31 pm
Mary, I follow the rules of the road. If I wear a helmet will you and other drivers stop speedingRead More and running red lights? An average of 17 cyclists are killed every year by drivers. not once has a driver been injured when hitting a cyclist. Do you really think we're not paying attention? You're using your car to get somewhere. That's fine. I'm using a bike to get somewhere. Please respect my right to use the road.
Mary Colliton April 29, 2013 at 02:43 pm
No not thinly veiled attempts. Real attempts. When bikers start adhering to the rules of the road,Read More wearing helmets and paying attention they'll be taken seriously. Until then ... got to the park!