Free webinar at 1:00 p.m. Eastern time (US), October 8, 2025

This webinar will:

· Describe scientific barriers to progress in developing laboratory-based diagnostic tests and new medications for patients with autism spectrum disorder.

· Determine the relative scientific merits of published findings from animal models of autism spectrum disorder by assessing their face and construct validity to the human disorder.

· Provide detailed scientific information on the biology of social deficits with an emphasis on vasopressin and oxytocin signaling pathways and biologically informed treatment trials in patients with autism spectrum disorder.

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is currently diagnosed behaviorally because its pathophysiology remains poorly understood. Consequently, there are no laboratory-based diagnostic tests to detect ASD and no disease-modifying medications that effectively treat its core behavioral features. The capability of rapidly detecting ASD based on neurochemical markers, however, would revolutionize ASD detection, enable more timely behavioral intervention, and provide targets for pharmacological treatment. To address these urgent unmet needs, we developed a translational ASD research platform, spanning studies of naturally low-social rhesus monkeys to children with ASD. Converging evidence from this body of research indicates that the neuropeptide vasopressin plays a critical and conserved role in regulating social abilities, and that brain vasopressin (but not oxytocin) signaling is impaired in low-social monkeys, children with ASD, and newborn infants before the period when ASD first manifests. On the basis of this compelling evidence, we conducted a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled pilot trial. We found that intranasal vasopressin treatment is well tolerated and significantly improves social abilities in children with ASD. These findings suggest that a neurochemical marker of impaired social functioning may be present very early in life, before behavioral symptoms emerge, and that the vasopressin signaling pathway may hold diagnostic and therapeutic promise for ASD.

Vasopressin Biology in Autism: From Biomarker to Treatment Target

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About the speaker:

Karen J. Parker, PhD is the inaugural Truong-Tan Broadcom Endowed Professor and Associate Chair of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University, where she leads the Major Laboratories Steering Committee and directs the Social Neurosciences Research Program. She is also an Affiliate Scientist at the California National Primate Research Center and a Fellow of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ACNP). Dr. Parker received her undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of Michigan. She completed postdoctoral training at Stanford University and joined the Stanford faculty thereafter. The principal goal of her research program is to better understand the biology of social functioning across a range of species, and to translate these fundamental insights to drive diagnostic and treatment advances for patients with social impairments, with a core focus on autism spectrum disorder. Dr. Parker’s research has been supported by the NIH, Simons Foundation, and Department of Defense, published in leading scientific journals (e.g., Science Translational Medicine, PNAS, Molecular Psychiatry), and featured across diverse media outlets (e.g., Huberman Lab podcast, NPR, CBS, New York Times, LA Times, Science, Scientific American). She has attended key opinion leader meetings at the U.S. National Academies and NIH, and held leadership roles on international research and ethics advisory committees for the Society for Neuroscience and ACNP. Dr. Parker currently lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband, three children, and two Australian shepherds.

The post Vasopressin Biology in Autism: From Biomarker to Treatment Target appeared first on Autism Research Institute.

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SPECIAL TIME – Free webinar at 11:30 a.m. Eastern time (US), October 1, 2025

Tune in to hear Adrien Eshraghi, MD, MSc, FACS, a 2022 ARI grant recipient, discuss the management of otolaryngology co-morbidities associated with autism.

Management of Otolaryngology Co-Morbidities Associated with Autism

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About the speaker:

Dr. Adrien Eshraghi is board certified in Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery. He is Board Certified in Neurotology. He served as the past President of the Florida Society of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery.

His training and experience at Sorbonne University in Paris, UCLA, and University of Miami encompasses medical, surgical, holistic, and integrative approaches to disease management. By combining these approaches, he provides comprehensive management of Ear and Hearing Disorders (Otology and Neurotology)

He is a surgeon-scientist with over 200 scientific papers published (H-Index 50), over 500 presentations at national and international scientific meetings. He is selected by his peers to be one of the “Top Doctors” and “Best Doctors in America” yearly since 2012. He is ranked as one of the Top 2% Scientists in 2024 that are leading the minds in science (Stanford University Top’s 2% Scientist List in the world).

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Free webinar at 1 p.m. Eastern time (US), Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Autism Psychopharmacology

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About the speaker:

M. Pilar Trelles, MD, is a licensed and certified child and adolescent psychiatrist. Dr. Trelles has expertise in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and related neurodevelopmental disabilities (NDDs) and has received specialized training in the utility of genomic medicine to better understand these conditions.

Dr. Trelles’ clinical and research work has been dedicated to improving access to care for under-resourced communities with NDDs. By establishing strong community partnerships with national and international stakeholders, she has developed initiatives that improve healthcare disparities and build capacities in the community to improve research participation of ethnic and racial minorities in ASD research. She has obtained significant grant support and has been the recipient of multiple awards for junior investigators. Dr. Trelles has published extensively in professional journals and has been invited frequently to present nationally and internationally.

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Free webinar at 1 p.m. Eastern time (US), Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Adam Naples, PhD, a 2022 ARI research grant recipient, will share research updates on auditory sensitivities in autism.

Auditory Sensitivities in Autism

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About the speaker:

Adam Naples, PhD, is an Assistant Professor in the Child Study Center at the Yale School of Medicine. As a researcher at Yale he has co-authored papers on autism, reading disability and genetics and developed novel experimental methods for studying brain activity during live and simulated social interactions. Dr. Naples received his B.S from Cornell University, his Ph.D. in psychology from Yale University, and post-doctoral training at the Yale Child Study Center. He has also been active in the mentoring and training of graduate and undergraduate students and post-doctoral fellows. His primary research interests are understanding the neural and cognitive mechanisms that lead to variability in developmental disorders.

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