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037 _ _ |a FZJ-2024-05182
100 1 _ |a Lin, Feng
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111 2 _ |a FENS Forum 2024
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|d 2024-06-25 - 2024-06-29
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245 _ _ |a Reliability of reduced inter-subject functional connectivity during naturalistic movie-watching fMRI in autism - comparison of German and Finnish samples
260 _ _ |c 2024
336 7 _ |a Conference Paper
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520 _ _ |a Autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder, which may also be associated withaltered sensory responsivity to external stimuli. Naturalistic functionalmagnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is a useful way to characterize brainactivity in real-life stimuli (e.g. movie-watching). Inter-subject functionalconnectivity (ISFC) is sensitive to stimuli-driven neural coupling acrossindividuals and appears to characterize the potential idiosyncrasy of brainactivity in the group of autistic participants (Bolton et al., 2018). The aim ofour study is to investigate idiosyncrasy by examining ISFCs between adultswith autism (AUT) and neurotypical (NT) individuals and to validate potentialfindings using cross-country datasets (German and Finnish samples).
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910 1 _ |a Independent Max Planck Research Group for Social Neuroscience, Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, Munich
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