The Williams Syndrome Association will celebrate 30 years of support and education for individuals with WS and their families at next summer’s National Convention – July 3-7 in Boston, Massachusetts. Throughout the week we will bring together more than 60 experts for education and networking opportunities. The WSA’s national convention and international professional conferences are the premier continuing education event for Williams syndrome, offering unparalleled program quality and diversity. We hope you will join us!
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Call for Presentations | Williams Syndrome Association
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
Hometown Hero: Sweet Volunteer is 'Asset to Beaumont' - Royal Oak, MI Patch
Joshua Levinson is a popular person atBeaumont Hospital in Royal Oak for a couple of reasons — his infectious smile and his candy cart.
The 31-year-old Royal Oak resident is known in some circles at the hospital as the Candy Man — the guy, who as the Sammy Davis Jr. song suggests, “makes the world taste good.”
For the past half-dozen years or so, he has volunteered five mornings a week at Beaumont selling chocolate and sugary treats to the staff and visitors, and otherwise brightening mornings with his winning smile.
"I like my job. It's fun," he said as he made change for a woman in the south entrance lobby. He easily charms the customer with his friendly face and warm personality. He may not say a lot to her, but she leaves smiling.
“I would say more people know Joshua than me,” said his father, Dr. Marty Levinson, a Beaumont pediatrician, “and I have been on staff here for 31 years.”
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Super-social gene may hold clues to autism, other disorders
In some cases, he's taken cells from children with Williams syndrome, but instead of using the somewhat painful procedure to obtain skin cells, he's taken cells from lost baby teeth, using a so-called Tooth Fairy extraction kit.Gage said he’s intrigued at the idea of dissecting something as complex as human behavior down to the level of cells in a petri dish.
Already, since the grant was awarded in May, Gage and his colleagues have shown that the early proliferation of brain cells is lower in people with Williams syndrome than in those with normal function.
With time and persistence, it might one day be possible to develop drugs or other therapies that could be used to treat the conditions, Gage said.
Williams syndrome is the perfect test case for studying the link between genes and behavior, Bellugi said. The disorder is very specific, occurring only when a certain cluster of genes is missing from one of two copies of chromosome 7.
“We’re only talking about something like 25 to 28 genes out of 30,000 genes in the brain,” Bellugi said. “And it’s always the same set of genes.”
Monday, September 19, 2011
Learning to see: How vision sharpens – The Chart - CNN.com Blogs
'via Blog this'
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Six Johns Hopkins Faculty Named Guggenheim Fellows | R&D Mag
'via Blog this'
Thursday, July 14, 2011
LT alum takes home gold at Special Olympics games in Greece
And winning a gold medal in her third and final race July 3 was like the proverbial icing on the cake for the Lyons Township High School alumna from Brookfield with the encouragement of her own cheering section of 10 family members and friends.
“It was tremendous,” DeCarlo said after a whirlwind 10 days of competing in the same venue as the 2004 Olympics. “I did very well, and everyone was very helpful.”
DeCarlo, 37, won a gold medal in the 4x50 meter freestyle relay. a bronze in the 100 meter freestyle and a fourth-place in the 50 meter freestyle race.
“It was amazing meeting people from all over the world,” she said. “We traded pins, and I have 40 pins from different countries, like Canada, Mexico, New Zealand, Germany and India.”
A highlight of the trip was hearing Stevie Wonder perform at the opening ceremony.
“It was amazing to see him. He got the crowd dancing,” DeCarlo recalled. “I did a dance with a Greek dancer, and we went around in circles.”
Saturday, July 2, 2011
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Illinois Swimmer with Williams Syndrome Competing in World Special Olympics
She is the only swimmer from Illinois.
After 23 years of winning medals in different events, 37-year-old Jeanne Decarlo's dream has come true.
At Elmhurst's YMCA, Jeanne practices swimming as her coach and mom Sheri encourages her to swim faster.
Swimming has always been something Jeanne does well. She was born with Williams Syndrome.
Thursday, June 9, 2011
Scientists find new genetic clues that may link Autism to Williams Syndrome
"The third analysis, led by by Matthew State of Yale and colleagues, group found an association between mutations and autism that, when deleted, also play a role in Williams syndrome, a rare developmental disorder. People with that condition tend to be highly social, sensitive and empathetic. In contrast, people with autism have difficulty interpreting social cues and interacting with others.
“This relatively small genomic interval clearly holds important clues to understanding the social brain,” State said in a statement.
But given the large number of genetic variations that the analyses have identified, the findings indicate that the condition is extremely complicated, the researcher said.
“The diversity implies that a treatment for one form of autism may have no value for the majority,” Wigler said."
Friday, May 20, 2011
Salk researcher gets $5.5 million grant to study Williams syndrome
The Salk Institute for Biological Studies was awarded a $5.5 million research grant today to study Williams syndrome as a way to learn more about neurological development in children.
The award from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development could help researchers untangle the connection between genes and social behavior.
“How the brain processes social information and integrates it with other forms of perception and learning is one of the major frontiers in neuroscience,” said Ursula Bellugi, director of the Laboratory for Cognitive Neuroscience at the institute.
“Using Williams syndrome as the basis for a new approach to social neuroscience is exciting and promising, in part because its genetic basis is clearly understood, and it is associated with a very specific pattern of cognitive strengths and weaknesses and some puzzling paradoxes,” the professor said.
The condition is the result of a faulty recombination of cells during the development of sperm or egg cells, leaving nearly all sufferers lacking certain genes.
Victims are gregarious and attracted to strangers, but have difficulty understanding inanimate objects. They are beset with health problems and have a low IQ.
Bellugi said victims of the syndrome who are asked to draw a bicycle will instead draw its parts randomly across a piece of paper.
“Understanding the mechanisms and pathways underlying the organization of human social behavior is important in a wide variety of mental disorders,” Bellugi said. “By dissecting Williams syndrome, we hope to gain new insight into other neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism.”
Wednesday, May 11, 2011
Battling Williams syndrome - FOX23 News
"Vanderbilt University is studying how music - and more - affects anxiety at this special camp for people with Williams syndrome.
'It's kind of a lesson in contradictions. How can people who have significant developmental disabilities also have pronounced and marked interest in music and musical talent,' Dr. Elisabeth Dykens asked?
The answer could lead to new treatments for all people with anxiety. Research Seth is proud to be a part of."
There is a very good and short video on the link or you can go directly to it here: http://clipsyndicate.com/video/playlist/18795/2450897?wpid=9616