HIGHLIGHTS
- who: Hannah Meyer-Lindenberg from the Department of Forensic and Neurodevelopmental Sciences, Institute UK have published the research work: Facial expression recognition is linked to clinical and neurofunctional differences in autism, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
- what: These observations have prompted recent research efforts to move beyond the analysis of group-level differences to identify tests or markers that can be used to stratify autism into clinically relevant biological subgroups . This study explored difficulties in facial expression recognition as a potential stratification marker for social communication difficulties in autism. The authors explored the role of expression . . .
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