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View the 2024 Holiday Art Gallery
            Congratulations to Blake Henkel, a 32-year-old artist with autism, whose artwork "Chillin' Friends" was selected to illustrate our 2024 holiday greeting card.
View the full gallery of artwork submitted by artists of all ages.
        
    Revealing Stories of Late-Talking Children Embedded in Electronic Health Records
            Embedded in electronic health record (EHR) data are the stories of thousands of late-talking children and how their communication abilities develop over time, what co-occurring conditions they may have, and which services they may be accessing. 
        
    Scholarship Supports Research and Training Experience in South Africa for Duke Med Student
            The unique Third Year curriculum at Duke University School of Medicine encourages tomorrow’s physician leaders to broaden their background in patient care through a fieldwork experience in patient-oriented research.
        
    Leveraging the Duke Autism Center of Excellence Award: Training Grants Support Faculty with Research Career Development and Study Funding
            In 2024, three grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality supported faculty members in their research career development. 
Alexandra Bey, MD, PhD; Matthew Engelhard, MD, PhD; and Danai Fannin, PhD, CCC-SLP, are leveraging the NIH-funded Duke Autism Center of Excellence grant to conduct their own related research studies. 
        
    Undergraduate Researcher Angela Claveria Receives NASA Internship
            Congratulations to Angela Claveria on receiving a NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration internship in biomechanics research! She will spend the Spring 2025 semester in Houston with NASA’s Anthropometry and Biomechanics Testing and Analytics team.
        
    Employee Spotlight: Sam Brandsen
            Originally trained as a physicist with a focus on quantum information theory, Dr. Sam Brandsen brings a new perspective and fresh ideas to research here at the Center for Autism. Sam completed his Ph.D. in Physics here at Duke University in 2021, but during his studies, he became increasingly interested in autism research. As an autistic individual and parent to an autistic child, Sam is especially interested in understanding quality of life in autistic individuals and learning ways to help improve the well-being of autistic individuals across the lifespan.
        
    Duke Center for Autism Opens Submissions for Annual Holiday Art Gallery and Contest
            The Duke Center for Autism welcomes neurodivergent artists of all ages and their families to submit artwork for the 2024 Holiday Greeting Art Gallery and Contest.
        
    Student-Curated Exhibition Explores Portraits from the World of Autism
            Mary Berridge’s award-winning series of photographs is paired with narratives written primarily by the subjects or their parents. The exhibition, Visible Spectrum: Portraits from the World of Autism, offers an intimate view of life with autism, as told from within an autism community, which includes Berridge and her son.
        
    Employee Spotlight: Nicolas Camacho
            Born in Bogota, Columbia, Nicolas Camacho moved to the United States at the age of 2, where he lived in Westchester, New York through high school. He completed his Bachelor’s degree at Columbia University where he studied engineering for two years before falling in love with Psychology during one of his Developmental Psychology classes and changing majors. During college, Nicolas spent time as an applied behavior analysis intern, and worked as a research assistant after graduation to gain hands on experience in the field before applying to graduate school at Duke.
        
    COMET Team Poster Wins Award at Duke Psychiatry Research Day
            The COMET study team of Dr Kim Carpenter's lab for won 2nd place in the poster competition at Duke Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences' annual research day, for their poster "Patterns of Resting State EEG in Children with Autism, ADHD, and Co-Occurring Diagnoses"