questions
Our EEG findings lead to some further questions.

First, where in the brain are these EEG signals coming from?

And second, what compensatory processes might subserve autistic subjects' intact behavioural performance at long inter-target intervals, when EEG measures show no indication that selective attention is happening?

To answer these questions, we adapted our experiment to fMRI.


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`Physiological Studies of Attention in Autism: Implications for Autistic Cognition and Behaviour', Matthew Belmonte, 26 January 2002