Autism Science Foundation

ASF Weekly Science Podcasts

Health EN ↓ 10 episodes

The latest autism research news stories with ASF Chief Science Officer Alycia Halladay

Author

Autism Science Foundation

Category

Health

Podcast website

asfpodcast.org

Latest episode

Jun 28, 2026

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Episodes

What can understanding autistic transgender individuals tell us about sex differences in ASD? 28.06.2026

Happy Pride! In honor of June, this week’s podcast focuses on the specific needs of those who are transgender or sexually diverse and also autistic. What is the prevalence of autism in those who are transgender and what is the prevalence of being transgender in those who are autistic? New research has emerged which shows … Continue reading "What can understanding autistic transgender i...

Autism and disorders of aging 14.06.2026

We have talked already about the link between autism and dementia, however a lesser known association is the one between autism and another disorder of aging: Parkinson’s Disease. A recent presentation at INSAR revealed what is known about the relationship, why they are related, what causes the association and what people with autism can do … Continue reading "Autism and disorders of a...

Antidepressants do not cause autism 01.06.2026

In all the recent hype on the “overprescribing” of psychiatric medications, there is a circulating rumor antidepressant use in the mother during pregnancy has could be linked to an autism diagnosis in the child. Thankfully, there is research on this topic, and the results are clear: antidepressant exposure during pregnancy does not cause autism in … Continue reading "Antidepressa...

Lost in translation: SPARK NS helps scientists with a good idea turn it into therapies for families 17.05.2026

SPARK – neuroscience, known to autism researchers as the other “SPARK”, is a project based out of Stanford University. This project does not collect genetics on hundreds of thousands of people, instead, they that provide funding, advice, support, mentorship, coaching and project management to scientists who have some evidence of a target in the brain … Continue reading "Los...

Somebody’s got to do it….it should someone from the autism community. 04.05.2026

In November, there will be many Congressional seats open. Wouldn’t it be great if it was someone with firsthand knowledge of the experiences of autism families and understood what they were facing? In NJ, that is happening. Dr. Samuel Wang, autism researcher and autism sibling, is running for Congress. Today’s podcast interviews Dr. Wang, why … Continue reading "Somebody’s...

Why is paramecetol safety so perplexing? 19.04.2026

Another study on acetaminophen (known as paramecetol in Denmark) on probability of having a child with autism, this one with over 1.5 million pregnant women, 31k who were exposed to acetaminophen. The HHS Secretary is calling it “garbage in and garbage out” because it showed no link, but in fact, it is a strong study … Continue reading "Why is paramecetol safety so perplexing?"

The Mitochondria in a Minute 06.04.2026

The word “mitochondrial deficits” gets thrown around a lot as a cause of autism, but what does this really mean? This week we interview Dr. Carisa Sirois from the University of Wisconsin, who recently published a review of how the mitochondria are involved in neurodevelopmental disorders. The ways mitochondria are involved in ASD are not … Continue reading "The Mitochondria in a...

Updates from I-ACC, late prematurity and language development 22.03.2026

What is the Independent Autism Coordinating Committee and why did it meet? This week’s podcast discusses the need and the agenda of Thursday’s meeting. In addition, more research showing that epidemiologists should consider different features of autism together with prevalence numbers because they may differ across the spectrum. Finally, different types of language development are &#82...

Rare Disease Week, the FDA, mortality in autism, trajectories and subcategories 08.03.2026

This week’s podcast summarizes some highlights in scientific research and includes a recognition of Rare Disease Week and actions taken by the FDA to ease the criteria for evaluating genetic therapies for rare genetic disorders, the best study to date on the mortality in autism, genetic prediction of outcome in individuals with a diagnosis, and … Continue reading "Rare Disease Week, th...

Health Care for Autistic Individuals During Transition Age 23.02.2026

This week we talk to Dr. Emily Hotez from UCLA, (and a sibling to an autistic adult) who has focused her research on reducing stigma and marginalization, which will ultimately improve research participation to increase scientifically valid options for families. She also works on a nationwide project to improve health outcomes in autistic individuals, from … Continue reading "Health Care for...

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