Dawson has had a career as a scientist and practicing psychologist focusing on autism and the effects of early experience on the developing brain. Dawson is currently William Cleland Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry and the founding director of the Duke Center for Autism and Brain Development. She directs an NIH Autism Center of Excellence research program at Duke. She formerly directed the Duke Institute for Brain Sciences. Early in her career, Dawson was an assistant professor of child clinical psychology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and affiliate of the
Treatment and Education of Autistic and Related Communication Handicapped Children program from 1980 to 1985. In 1985, she returned to her alma mater to join the psychology department faculty, where she directed the University of Washington Child Clinical Psychology Program (1985–1991; 1999–2004). From 1996–2008, Dawson was founding director of the University of Washington Autism Center, which worked with
Microsoft Corporation to set a precedent for companies to provide insurance coverage for autism
early intervention. At the UW Autism Center, she directed an NIH-funded autism research program focusing on
genetics,
neuroimaging, early diagnosis, and early intervention. Dawson also founded and oversaw a treatment center for autistic children and adolescents at the UW Autism Center, which provided multi-disciplinary clinical services for autistic children from infancy through late adolescence. Dawson has served as associate editor or editorial board member for seven scientific journals:
Clinical Psychological Science,
Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders,
Development and Psychopathology,
Psychophysiology,
Autism Research,
Autism Research and Treatment, and the
Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders. Dawson's research has focused on early detection and intervention, brain function (using
electrophysiology and
functional magnetic resonance imaging), and genetic studies in autism. Her early work demonstrated that maternal depression is associated with differences in early
brain activity and
stress responses of infants and children. Her lab also demonstrated that autism signs can be detected in infants and described differences in early brain functioning related to autism. Dawson's lab at the University of Washington described differences in social brain circuitry related to
face processing in autism, apparent as early as six months of age. In collaboration with Dr.
Sally J. Rogers, Dawson developed and empirically validated the
Early Start Denver Model, a comprehensive early intervention program for autistic
toddlers and
preschoolers. With
Guillermo Sapiro, she developed a novel method for early detection of autism based on computer vision and machine learning.
Autism Speaks Dawson was on faculty at the University of Washington from 1980 to 2008 when she left to become Autism Speaks' first chief science officer. At Autism Speaks, Dawson oversaw $20–30 million in annual research funding, including funding for the Autism Treatment Network, the
Autism Genetic Resource Exchange, the Autism Genome Project, and the
Autism Tissue Program. ==Media and popular press coverage==