Today's Neuroscience, Tomorrow's History: Uta Frith - Audio artwork

Today's Neuroscience, Tomorrow's History: Uta Frith - Audio

15 episodes - English - Latest episode: about 15 years ago - ★★★★★ - 2 ratings

Supported by a grant from the Wellcome Trust to Dr Tilli Tansey and Professor Leslie Iversen, the Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL presents a series of podcasts on the history of neuroscience featuring eminent people in the field:

Professor Uta Frith was born on 25th May 1941 in Germany. She completed her undergraduate degree in experimental psychology at the Universitaet des Saarlandes before training in clinical psychology at the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London. She completed her PhD on autism in 1968.

Professor Uta Frith is best known for her research on autism spectrum disorders. Her book, Autism, Explaining the Enigma (1989) has been translated into many languages. She was one of the initiators of the study of Asperger's Syndrome in the UK and her work on reading development, spelling and dyslexia has been highly influential. Frith’s work on theory of mind in autism proposes the idea that people with autism have specific difficulties understanding other people’s beliefs and desires. Much of this work was carried out with Simon Baron-Cohen who was her PhD student. She has also suggested that individuals with autism have ‘weak central coherence’, and are better than typical individuals at processing details but worse at integrating information from many different sources.

Throughout her career she has been developing a neuro-cognitive approach to developmental disorders. In particular, she has investigated specific cognitive processes and their failure in autism and dyslexia. Her aim is to discover the underlying cognitive causes of these disorders and to link them to behavioural symptoms as well as to brain systems. She aims to make this research relevant to the education of people with development disorders and to contribute to a better quality of their everyday life.

Professor Frith is a Fellow of the Royal Society, the British Academy and the Academy of Medical Sciences. She is Emeritus Professor of Cognitive Development at University College London and Research Foundation Professor at the Faculties of Humanities and Health Sciences, University of Aarhus, Denmark.

Medicine Health & Fitness uta frith experimental psychology clinical psychology autism asperger's syndrome reading spelling dyslexia theory of mind neuro-cognitive
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Episodes

Early Years And Influences

June 24, 2009 09:38 - 2 minutes

Early Years And Influences

Brain substrates – visualising the autistic brain

June 13, 2008 13:29 - 5 minutes

Brain substrates – visualising the autistic brain

Brain Substrates – visualising cognitive brain function, the brain’s mentalising system

June 13, 2008 13:29 - 5 minutes

Brain Substrates – visualising cognitive brain function, the brain’s mentalising system

Autism – a single disorder or a disorder spectrum?

June 13, 2008 13:28 - 3 minutes

Autism – a single disorder or a disorder spectrum?

Autism – detail-focus and weak central coherence

June 13, 2008 13:28 - 4 minutes

Autism – detail-focus and weak central coherence

Autism – Sabotage and Deception experiment

June 13, 2008 13:28 - 4 minutes

Autism – Sabotage and Deception experiment

Autism – theory of mind and the Sally-Ann experiment

June 13, 2008 13:28 - 9 minutes

Autism – theory of mind and the Sally-Ann experiment

Autism – the information processing revolution

June 13, 2008 13:28 - 4 minutes

Autism – the information processing revolution

Autism – a disorder of behaviour or biology

June 13, 2008 13:27 - 4 minutes

Autism – a disorder of behaviour or biology

Dyslexia - does it run in families?

June 13, 2008 13:27 - 2 minutes

Dyslexia - does it run in families?

Dyslexia – the English language and dyslexia in Europe

June 13, 2008 13:27 - 4 minutes

Dyslexia – the English language and dyslexia in Europe

Dyslexia – visualising brain activity during speech processing

June 13, 2008 13:27 - 3 minutes

Dyslexia – visualising brain activity during speech processing

Dyslexia – speech processing and the spoonerisms test

June 13, 2008 13:27 - 3 minutes

Dyslexia – speech processing and the spoonerisms test

Dyslexia – first theories and insights into its cause

June 13, 2008 13:27 - 4 minutes

Dyslexia – first theories and insights into its cause

London and a PhD at the Institute of Psychiatry

June 13, 2008 13:26 - 4 minutes

London and a PhD at the Institute of Psychiatry