Talk:Controversies in autism/Archive 1

Serious housecleaning

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OK, folks, I realize I may have offended some of you, but this article needs to be kept short if anyone is going to read it and find it useful. I mercilessly cut and edited stuff that I found:

  • repetitive
  • too long
  • clearly partisan

I did try to keep discussion of the controversy itself, but limited the articles to descriptions of the controversy rather than a full-blown discourse on each one. I also reordered things so we started from the bottom up, rather than in what appears to be a random order.

I'll continue to do this kind of thing, because I really want this to be a useful article for anyone who is interested. If you strongly disagree with what I do, I'd like to propose that you:

  • Start a separate article. One should definitely be written about the rights of autistic people (Note: "autistic" is not a noun; it's an adjective), ABA and controversies related to it; history of treating autism; the low-functioning vs. high-functioning issue; and probably others. I have followed this advice myself in setting up a separate article on biomedical intervention.
  • Edit with a fair mind. It's simply not fair to hijack this article to rant on and on and on about only one thing.

As an editorial aside, I think it's offensive to parents of autistic children to assert that autism is not a disease or a disorder. Yes, at some point parents have to accept that their children will be different from NT kids, but these parents put their heart and soul into making lives easier for their kids.--Leifern 21:32, 15 Dec 2004 (UTC)

I really enjoyed this article and its basis of ASD. It has some run on sentences that may confuse the reader, but overall the information present is useful and well thought out. It also covers all the basis. Thank You! Ssarae (talk) 19:10, 29 March 2012 (UTC)Reply

Doesn't it make it easier on the kids to treat them as not being diseased or disordered? --Bluejay Young 06:32, Feb 6, 2005 (UTC)
I think it's offensive to autistics to assert that autism is purely detrimental, which calling it a "disease" or "disorder" inherently does.
Take your argument and substitute the word "homosexual" for "autistic" and tell me with a straight face that you think it's equally valid. Thsgrn 04:31, 16 July 2005 (UTC)Reply


Did I miss your citations somewhere? Re: adj/noun- I am an autistic. I am an aspie. I am autistic. I am aspie. /o-'tis-tik/ adjective or noun ZagrebFraggle 14:37, 17 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

POV dispute

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This page is written with a clear POV in mind and needs help from someone who knows more than I. Tuf-Kat 01:02, Oct 6, 2004 (UTC)

Whoa, I've never seen an article improve so much in such a short time. Just last night this article was a real mess; I added cleanup and NPOV tags and it literally shaped up overnight. Thanks to Leifern, Poccil and all the rest for your valuable contributions. --Szyslak 05:40, 16 Oct 2004 (UTC)

  • I believe too much as been deleted under the "Autism Rights Movement". I understand the need for a neutral perspective, but I believe the descriptions of the autism rights movement could have been reworded to be more neutral without being removed completely. For example, "There is nothing like the threat of extinction to kickstart a minority into fighting for equality" from a previous version of the article could have been changed to "Some autistics feel the desire to cure autism means the extinction of their way of being." -- Q0 17:00, Oct 16, 2004
    • I am honestly not familiar enough with the autism rights movement to edit the initial entry fairly. I would urge you to edit the relevant section, using NPOV discretion. --Leifern 18:26, 16 Oct 2004 (UTC)

Whoever made this a separate topic, thank you!

I'm making a few small POV changes, as there's a distinct lack of neutrality here... nothing major though. Sparkleyone 09:35, 30 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

Vaccinations

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I removed sentences and two entire paragraphs that were argumentative against the alleged link between vaccination and autism. Perhaps there should be a separate entry on vaccination controversies.

But since this entry is about the controversy surrounding the theory (which shouldn't need to be put in quotes if that's what it is), it doesn't need to go into detail about the public health benefits of vaccinations.

Perhaps those who wish to eliminate vaccines entirely are "radical." I doubt that vaccinations have saved "countless" lives from death by rubella and mumps, or diphteria in developed countries. And I'd have to say that withholding information about dangers of vaccination is grounds for lawsuit if not criminal conviction.

I resisted the temptation to revert back to the so-called weasel text. Since this article is intended to describe a controversy, we can't conclude that the controversy doesn't exist, or is unfounded.

Hey, I'm not trying to be stubborn here. I really do appreciate the edits, and this is educating me as much as it is refreshing. I'm just trying to "be bold", as it were. Erm, anonymously, of course.

So far, studies fail to show correlation between vaccines and autism. That isn't the same as "overwhelming evidence" disproving the link. --Leifern 01:35, 31 Oct 2004 (UTC)

I might be wrong, but I have heard that autistic behaviour generally (biologically) begins to show, relatively shortly afterwards the young age where babies are vaccinated, thus leading parents to wrongly assume that the vaccination itself has caused the autism.(Hope this is clear.)

I'd be inclined to believe this if there weren't reports of children immediately falling ill after vaccination, and within one to ten days later, they begin exhibiting autistic behavior. Saw a report on this on CBS News and will try to find sources. --Bluejay Young 06:32, Feb 6, 2005 (UTC)
Thing is, this is hearsay. If you develop it at age X, there's a chance you'll start showing symptoms of it at any given time. If it is right after a shot, there's the same chance as before it. Also, if it is is a slide, them being ill may "hide" the condition, then when they don't go back to acting "normal" (or cease developing the way the parents think they should) the transition may be seen as more abrupt than it is in reality.
It is also possible that vaccines act as a trigger for the disease, or make it onset faster. Though it is claimed it appears more often now than it did before, I would argue that modern behavior allows autistic children to choose to do what they wish rather than be forced to do what their parents do. Also, greater awareness leads to a greater number of people diagnosed.
Though I have heard such claims, I have strong doubts; it is more likely the parents seeking something to blame for their child's condition. Autism is only arguably a disease, so I'm not really even sure if it were proven to be linked to vaccination that it would be worth banning them, especially given the fact that vaccines save the lives of countless people and have eradicated at least one terrible disease.
It shouldn't be hard to find sources for such claims; the problem is whether they are worth anything or not. Given that several large studies have failed to find any correlation, it is most likely that vaccines do not trigger autism, regardless of reports such as this. Titanium Dragon 07:26, 18 Feb 2005 (UTC)

Genetics

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Removed argumentative sections entirely.

A recent study in California shows empirically that the actual incidence is increasing, and anyone who works in the field will confirm this. Even so, the current passage makes the point carefully that there may be increased reporting as well. And that doesn't take into account the clear increase of the incidence in other disorders such as ADHD, which are probably related.

ADHD is a perceived condition that may have more to do with cultural prejudice than neurological anomaly. Still controversial as to whether or not it even exists. Some teachers have gotten slapped down for suggesting that ADHD was merely a difference in learning style which was being pathologized. --Bluejay Young 06:32, Feb 6, 2005 (UTC)
I believe Discover magazine also had an article a while back that talked about how ADHD was massively overdiagnosed. It might not have been discover though but another magazine. In any event, I will try to find it, but it is largely irrelevant other than to point out that autism may be overdiagnosed (or, possibly, because of the changing definition of autism or growing awareness of it). Titanium Dragon 07:29, 18 Feb 2005 (UTC)
I want to find an issue of Tikkun that we came across in either 2003 or '04, in which an educator talked about his having been chastised by his superiors for pointing out that the children getting labeled ADHD in his class and in the school in general came almost exclusively from rural areas. His idea was that, accustomed to freedom of movement and hands-on learning, these kids would have had more difficulty accommodating to the "sit still/ no talking" discipline than urban kids. --Bluejay Young 21:59, 8 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

Peter Breggin

The fact that autism is more common among boys than girls is neither here nor there. Nobody is claiming that genetics isn't a factor at all, only that environmental factors play a role, too. The idea is that some children have a genetic predisposition toward certain disorders that gets triggered by an environmental shock. This is hardly an outragous notion within medicine and genetics.

As the article itself points out, it may just be that autism is more diagnosed in males than females because of either misconceptions or females exhibiting fewer classical symptoms. Titanium Dragon 07:29, 18 Feb 2005 (UTC)

Severe vs. neurological

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Most developmental pediatricians - even some of the leading ones - are agnostic about the causes and dynamics of autism, treating the mind and nervous system as a "black box." This is consistent with the whole DSM-IV framework.

So instead of stating a premise one way or the other upfront, I think it's safe to characterize it as "severe."

Mercury

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I am sorry to have to keep doing this, but I am taking out argumentative passages on the issue of vaccination, for two reasons:

1) This entry is meant to outline and present the controversy, not go into the specific detail on each side of the issue. If we're going to allow detailed arguments on one side of the issue in, we'd have to bring in arguments on the other side.

2) Again, the male vs. female argument is neither here nor there. There are all kinds of allergies, intolerances, etc., that are more prevalent among boys than girls, but that doesn't take away the point that these problems exist.

3) On a more personal note, I find it reckless that when some people say that "mercury in some forms isn't dangerous." Mercury is one of the most volatile and poisonous substances known - to casually introduce it into the bloodstream because it might be ok, is simply scary.

Oxygen is one of the most poisonous and volatile substances in nature, and we breathe it to live. Every element can kill you, given a sufficient amount (or not enough)
There is a difference. You need some amount of oxygen to live, but you can live a healthy life without getting anywhere near mercury. Also, mercury and other heavy metals are in their own class of toxic substances because they stay in the body and are excreted with great difficulty and time. If you ask any doctor or scientist what is best, they'll all say "no mercury."
I would also like to point out that the cases of autism are continuing to rise despite the elimination of thimerosal from childhood vaccines. Autism, by definition, is diagnosed before the age of 2 (or 3, depending on which child psychiatrist or neurologist you talk to), which means that the current rising incidence of autism cannot be explained by the use of thimerosal.
Well, the rising incidence is also a matter of dispute, and the vaccination issue is related to immunogens, not just thimesoral. My own personal opinion is that research in this area is very difficult to make sense of - just creating a reliable control group is complicated enough.
You're also forgetting the minor issue that many of these immunogens are naturally present; if a child gets measels, they're getting exposed to the same protien coat/dead virus as the shot. Unless it is foreign antibodies (which is possible, though we naturally produce similar) it probably can't be from the shots unless there is some correlation between certain childhood illnesses and autism as well. Titanium Dragon 07:33, 18 Feb 2005 (UTC)
All of us are descendants of people who survived a wide variety of diseases, including those we get immunized against. Opponents of vaccinations argue that a) antibodies are introduced too early in a child's life; b) too many are introduced at once; c) contraction of the illnesses is never or rarely directly into tissue or the bloodstream - we have the benefit of the immune system in our digestive and respiratory systems. --Leifern 16:29, 2005 Feb 18 (UTC)

Anti-vaccination advocates

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It is unfair and inaccurate to characterize those who believe there's a link between autism and vaccinations as "anti-vaccination advocates." Some (probably a minority) are, but most simply think that children should be screened more carefully, and that the vaccination schedule is too aggressive.

I agree it is aggressive, and that it should be up to a "patient's choice", an informed consent that the parents and doctor need to come to grips with. Anti-vaccination or even the word "advocate" is too charged to really be used in a reference, but this topic is about a controversy. It's interesting to follow the way the debate has been going... at first, it was all about "is vaccination safe?" (the answer: not completely, something that all doctors assume and all patients aren't told). Now it's all about "How can risks be best communicated to patients?", a much better choice, in my opinion, as it emphasizes the role of the doctor as a counselor rather than a warden. I, for one, am personally horrified that more children have died due to preventable infectious disease in the UK in the past year than in the entirety of the 90's, but that's people for you. It's always a calculated risk to do anything to your body, whether it is getting a vaccine or eating potato chips.

Just because it's relevant, check out this link: http://www.discover.com/issues/jan-05/features/medicine/vaccine-autism-link-debunked/

"Screened". Ah but how, and for what? I suspect the suggestion of screening is sometimes a false one. Midgley 17:49, 11 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

Anti-cure terminology and quotes

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I think that the introductory paragraphs clearly state the controversy around whether autism is a disorder and what the limitations are of the diagnosis.

Parents therefore claim that they have recovered their kids, whether or not others agree that there is a real recovery, or whether a recovery is indeed necessary. No need to put it in quotes, or change the phrase to something about reducing autistic behaviors.

I think we have a tricky problem here in being both sensitive to parents who sincerely believe that autism is a disorder than can and should be cured; and the autistic-rights group, which rejects the entire premise that their personality traits are somehow flawed. I've tried to resolve this by only discussing recovery in sections that have as their premise that recovery is needed, while leaving issues on autistic people's rights alone. --Leifern 18:33, 26 Oct 2004 (UTC)
I believe at the very least the statement that says, "Everyone agrees that autism is treatable through medical or educational intervention" should be changed, because not everybody agrees with that. Perhaps it should say something like, "Everyone with the pro-treatment perspective believes autism can be treated..." Q0 03:59, 27 Oct 2004 (UTC)

Autism vs Aspergers; High Functioning vs Low Functioning

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As far as specifics are concerned, I've taken out sections that were rambling and incoherent. I do agree that subdivisions of autism are a little misleading, but I don't buy the notion that "low functioning" and "high-functioning" are inappropriate. Clearly, someone who can talk, shake hands with people, read, and have a job is higher functioning than someone who is non-verbal, has severe tactile defensiveness, and needs constant care and supervision. It's hard to imagine another planet where these things are equally functioning. --Leifern 18:33, 26 Oct 2004 (UTC)


But is "higher" functioning an appropriate word for it? --Bluejay Young 08:09, Nov 18, 2004 (UTC)
The problem with those labels is that they are one-dimensional (addressed already here or in other articles.) Some autistics can be mute and yet be highly intelligent, as shown by their writing (e.g. Jasmine O'Neil, Amanda Baggs, and so on.) Some autistics can be very talkative and lack toilet-training, to take another example. -Jose
I thought at wikipedia all sides of the issue were to be addressed in a neutral perspective. You might not agree with those who claim high functioning and low functioning are innappropriate labels, but there are some who do, and when there is controversy over an issue it still needs to be addressed, since this is after all, an article about the controversies in autism. Also, the deleted text included information about the autism vs. asperger's controversy, and I think it is very easy to understand why people don't see a reason for a separate "asperger's" and "autism" label. Even if the high functioning vs. low functioning controversy information isn't put back on the article, the asperger's vs. autism controversy I think should stay. The following web links [1] [2] and [3] provide arguments about the asperger's vs. autism controversy. As for high functioning vs. low functioning: when I think of how my own internal processing of socialization and social cues, I beleive it could have been modified only slightly, to have me appear very different to neurotypicals and have me labeled low functioning instead of high functioning, so I can see the point of people who don't believe there is a high/low functioning disctinction. I found this opinion on the issue [4]. Q0 00:23, 7 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Autism Rights Movement or Autistics Rights Movement

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Does anyone have an opinion about which one would be the better title to use? It seems a little more accurate to say "autistics" instead of autism, because it is the people who are autistic whose rights are to be activated by the movement. On the other hand, we do use phrases like "gay rights movement" instead of "gay's rights movement", so saying "autism rights movement would be consistant with what other movements have used. Q0 21:49, 29 Oct 2004 (UTC)

  • Whatever as long as you put an s for Movements. The goals an opinions are mostly scattered and there is no unified movement large enough to be "THE movement".
    • I've only identified one movement and I havn't seen any scattered goals or opinions. I am aware of a number of people who disagree but they don't seem to have any interest in activism, or are too busy, and have no publicity on the web for their positions, so I don't think they really count as being part of a "movement". I am very interested in knowing about the other movements and other goals. Q0 23:18, 28 Nov 2004 (UTC)
      • I guess I should say I have not found anything on the web for their positions, not that they have no publicity. Q0 23:21, 28 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Puzzle Piece Ribbon

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What does the PPR signify? That Autists have trouble understanding the puzzle pieces of society, and making them fit together? I am not sure if I have understood the meaning correctly.

No, it is a paradox. As I understand it, it has two meanings: "I am a person, not a puzzle", a retort to the CAN "solving the puzzle of autism" jazz; and it also means that society is composed of many different kinds of people, many colours, shapes, sizes, etc., and that autistics are part of that society and should be treated as such. Similar to the "American Quilt" image that Jesse Jackson used in his presidential campaign speeches.
I have never liked the puzzle piece ribbon for autistic liberation/rights, because I immediately recognized that the general public would take one look at that and think either "autism is a puzzle to be solved", or think what you thought. However, other than an ribbon consisting of beautiful coloured spinning wheels, a cheery array of numbers, or some other autistic delectation, I have no alternative suggestions. --Bluejay Young 08:05, Nov 18, 2004 (UTC)

Someone wanted reasons why autistic adults found the puzzle ribbon offensive. I don't know exactly, but here are some ideas I came up with:

  • They are having a hard time figuring things out about us that autistic adults could just tell them.
  • This is probably the most likely reason: it represents them putting autistic adults under the microscope and trying to figure us out, instead of acknowledging that we are people and they can just ask us. You have to look at objects under microscopes because you cannot ask objects about their properties, so them trying to figure us out without bothering to ask us is like we are being treated like objects.
  • Even though some things autistic adults might have as hard of a time explaining as they have, we might be able to try to point them in the right direction to try to start to explain some things about autism, but they don't bother listening to us.
  • It is a symbol used by organizations that disclude autistics, so the puzzle becomes sybmolic of our disclusion.

Q0 05:32, 27 Nov 2004 (UTC)

I found an alternative symbol to use instead of the puzzle piece ribbon, as follows: Oddizm's Mobius Rainbow: "Many autism spectrum adults object to being objectified by the puzzle ribbon. Furthermore, it is mainly associated with the issues of "normal" parents of autistic kids and so doesn't represent the reality of most adults on the autism spectrum. They want a different symbol and here is my offering." He is also selling cafepress items with this symbol. --Bluejay Young 06:32, Feb 6, 2005 (UTC)
FWIW, oddizm is a "she" named Camille. DaveSeidel 18:12, 13 Dec 2004 (UTC)

There is no dominant interpretation for the usage of the puzzle piece(s) symbol as it relates to the spectrum of conditions labeled as autism. Therefore, there is no correct or incorrect dichotomy and the matter is a question of artistic style and personal preference. It is a fallacious rhetorical device (straw man fallacy [5]) to arbitrarily assign to it a meaning and then supply argument against it. This renders controversies over the symbol's meaning superfluous and silly. schaferatsprynet 23:31, 10 February 2006 (UTC)SchaferatsprynetReply

Michelle Dawson, a "self trained" autism researcher?

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I noticed someone refered to Michelle Dawson as a "self-trained" autism researcher on the main article. I am curious what this significance is and why it was put in the article. Q0 02:27, 20 Nov 2004 (UTC)

--- She does not have an official diploma relating to autism research, so someone corrected the article. She might have an "as complete as it gets" understanding of autism - more so than many academics - as pointed out by Dr. Laurent Mottron in the infamous letter but that's apparently the end of her expertise.

She does not have meaningful experience with diplomacy between researchers or the operational limits of organisations who give services to autistics (whether the organisation is good or just a snake pit). Her demands of everything being perfect all at once are unrealistic.

That being said, I agree ABA has "scientific proof" rooted in electroshocks and other extreme aversives, and overused it to get prioritary financement for ABA programs who are not covered under the "scientific proof" because they are so different from the original. Lovaas' own 1987(?) paper proves it.

There is no real scientific proof for (or against) ABA as it exists now because lack of double blind. Theorically Lovaas could cousciously or not have altered the results by how he choose people for both groups.

Once ABA (without extreme aversives) sheds the bogus scientific claims and becomes a hopeful new therapy on equal footings with other non-proven startups who don't make flamboyant claims, I'd gladly give it a try until something proven comes along. This was never about abolishing ABA.

However Michelle Dawson would have ABA banned altogether. She's having the firm POV that any kind of treatment is destructive of the autistic's personality, and that rights should be granted to ALL autistics without the responsabilities other human beings have to get those rights.

I am curious about this paragraph. Has Michelle Dawson stated any of this herself or is this your interpretation of her? Q0 08:04, 26 Nov 2004 (UTC)

While discrimination against autistics exists and is rampant in many countries, her position is the very end of pro-autistic behavior extermism I could find after hours of internet research - being part of the very tip of extreme can be counterproductive regardless of right and wrong.

The end result of her recent court win in Canada is that some young autistics (whose parents believe the "use ABA or they're doomed" misused statistics) will end up institutionalized when it is known many of them will become functionnal by themselves over time! This is but one example of Michelle Dawson being counterproductive thru blind application of ideology without being pragmatic about what are the results of her acts.

I think it is *outrageous* to blame Michelle Dawson for the (anticipated, as-yet-theoretical) benighted actions of such parents! Shame, shame on whoever promulgates such contorted logic. It is the worst kind of "shooting the messenger". -- Phil Schwarz 07:43, 26 Nov 2004 (UTC)

(I wish someone would do a biography on her, I'm too lazy for that)

This isn't the first time I've heard opinions like this about Michelle Dawson. Perhaps this should be included in the article? As for calling Dawson "self-trained" in the article, I still don't think it is necessary to specify that a professional in a field doesn't have a university degree, it is well established in the field of critical thinking that being an expert in a field doesn't require a university degree, and that having a university degree doesn't imply expertise. Although I guess it doesn't hurt to specify it in the article so I'll let it be. Q0 01:23, 26 Nov 2004 (UTC)
I would like to clarify that I wasn't refering to the previous commenter's final paragraph when I made my original reply. Mostly I was refering to the "ABA or nothing" controversy that the commenter mentioned. If anyone wants proof of this, notice that my first reply was at 01:23, then the edit where I put the information about the "no ABA" vs. "ABA without barbaric adversives" controversy at 01:30 on the same day (seven minutes later). I ended up not mentioning Michelle Dawson's name in that description because it wasn't really necessary to do so. Q0 04:41, 27 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Article Too Long?

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When I saved a previous version of the article today I got a message saying: WARNING: This page is 34 kilobytes long. Please consider condensing the page and moving the detail to another article so it is not approaching or in excess of 32KB. Wikipedia reccomends condensing a page at 20 KB. Should the article be condensed? If so, how should it be? I wouldn't have a problem with giving each of the nine sections its own article. Another reccomendation is to divide it into the following sections:

  1. Usefulness of a diagnosis/intelligence tests
  2. Epidemiology/Genetics/Vaccines
  3. Prognosis/Treatment
  4. Autistics rights movements
  5. Famous Autistics

Q0 01:08, 21 Nov 2004 (UTC)


What about this key article? http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8268302.stm

"The NHS Information Centre found one in every hundred adults living in England has autism, which is identical to the rate in children.

If the vaccine was to blame, autism rates among children should be higher because the MMR has only been available since the early 1990s, the centre says" —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.166.122.57 (talk) 07:42, 28 December 2009 (UTC)Reply

Order of sections

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Is there any reason for the sections of the article to be ordered the way they are? When I looked in this history I noticed that the autistics' rights movement was the first section to be written into the article, even though it is towards the end of the article now. If there are no objections, I will move that section to the beginning, since it was first. Q0 00:41, 4 Dec 2004 (UTC)

It is hard to know which controversy is more important to highlight, but I don't agree that the "autistics' rights" should go first. It is the most verbose, least clear section of the whole article, and it is entirely unclear to me what level of acceptance it has. --Leifern 21:12, 15 Dec 2004 (UTC)

Autism watch

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Not a credible source - point of view based entirely on personal experience, and as such has no more place as a reference than the thousands of accounts by parents who have a dissimilar experience from this guy. --Leifern 15:32, Jun 3, 2005 (UTC)


POV edits

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It is alt med. (as defined by wikipedia to start with). It is only a small number and not all doctors think it is the failer of conventional medicne that has lead to autism becomeing a magnet for quack and chaletans.Geni 16:33, 3 Jun 2005 (UTC)

OK, Geni, let's look at your version, and I'll prove to you just how horrifically POV it is.
Here's what you think is "neutral":
A small (define "small" - they're in the thousands) but growing number of parents and medical professionals claim (unless you can demonstrate that they're only imagining it, it's neutral to write that they "report" it) to have successfully treated autistic children by pursuing restrictive diets, detoxification therapies, and a range of alternative medical treatments (I proposed "medical treatments," it's a matter of opinion just how "alternative" they are), collectively known as biomedical intervention. These claims are hotly contested by many (define "many" - I think it's safe to say that many are skeptical, a few are hotly opposed to it) doctors, some of whom believe that the failure of conventional medicine to address parental concerms has led to autism becoming a magnet for quacks and charlatans [6] (the reference is nothing but a personal account and has no place here.)
In other words, your reversal is what causes the point of view. And if your argument is with one word of the edit "alternative," you may not reverse the whole paragraph. --Leifern 17:04, Jun 3, 2005 (UTC)


Mottron is a con artist. Like Montreal's apsies is in whole danger :) (the supposed aspies...). I like comp. i was tda, after meeting with his buddies, at douglas hospital i am turning schizo theey said and somethin is messed up with my ccyngulate gyrus with not PET scan to confirm anything. (Damn i got a hole in the brain...) LMAO Mottron you said ....Freud Follower !!!!! (See U Soon..) Wiki Rock.. I'll start a big topic soon lot of proof. (Tips : Go see a Neurologist a rather a Psychiatrist, they know the brain is just molecules, and they have no need to bs anyone because their job are not obsolete they job are not obsolete).

Article is trashed

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This article used to be good, but is now trashed, apparently by an anonymous editor with an agenda. It's an article intended to describe a series of controversies, not resolve them. As it is, modifiers such as "most" are used without any substantiation as an appeal to authority on the issues; and the article is a complete jumble. I will rewrite when I have time, but for now these tags are needed. --Leifern 18:38, 1 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

I think readers should list specific complaints right here in this page so Wikipedians have some kind of guidance in improving the article. Neurodivergent 20:08, 4 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Well, for example, the statement that the "medical community" (a vaguely defined group of people) believe autism is "incurable" is patently false. If they don't know what it is, they can't possibly have an opinion on whether it is curable. Similarly, if it is true that "autism" isn't even one condition but many that have similar symptoms, it is ridiculous to question the same premise over and over. Also, the article needs structure; it rambles too much now. --Leifern 20:52, 4 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
I'm not sure what to do about that one. On the one hand it is true that autism being incurable is a very popular notion. You'll find it in most articles about autism on the web. I do believe it's true that autism can't really go away, but maybe that's not enterily true. On the other hand, there are parents who report their children have "recovered" -- after they learn to speak or start behaving in a way that cannot be distinguished from that of their peers (externally by a lay person.) So despite it being incurable according to the "medical community" there appear to be many cases of autistics who do "recover" or simply mature. (If you read "The Einstein Syndrome" you get the impression that some kids labeled autistic can not only recover but become university professors and the "life of the party" at the same time.) Much of it is a case of not giving "false hope" IMHO. But I digress. If the sentence is uncitable as it seems, I'd vote for just removing it and any dependent sentences. Neurodivergent 01:48, 5 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
I'd be inclined to agree, but that is very far from being "trashed", that's just hyperbole. I'd suggest a series of bullets detailing the points Leifern considers questionable, and a line-by-line cleanup based on that. To my reading this article is anything but "trashed", it's a generally balanced summary of a difficult subject. - Just zis Guy, you know? [T]/[C] :: AfD? 10:04, 5 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Feedback I'd give about this article and also about the Autism epidemic article is that they seem to rehash content that's either already in the autism article or should be there. For example, the section on Treatment choices should probably be renamed "Controversies about treatment" and it should only deal with significantly controversial treatments and why they are controversial; namely ABA, CFGF, Son-Rise (missing), Other Biomedical, Drugs, and perhaps "Non-intervention" and maybe one section to mention all other treatments that are mostly promoted by charlatans. Neurodivergent 20:03, 5 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
I think this is a matter of structure, and I'll try to work on it when I have more than a few minutes. We need to build up from the bottom, i.e., starting out by explaining that the nature and diagnosis of autism is in question. --Leifern 14:49, 6 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
To elaborate, I think the section titles might be inviting people to add their favorite approaches or theories. In the Autism epidemic article the "Proposed causes" section might be inviting editors to add their favorite autism theory; the title should be undestood to mean "Proposed causes of prevalence increase". I already commented out 3 sections there that had nothing to do with prevalence increase. (The assortative mating theory there, btw, needs to be elaborated further to qualify.) Neurodivergent 19:22, 6 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

Re:"double blind" - I have to laugh when people ask for double-blind studies of behavioral therapy. It simply isn't possible. The people who administer the therapy obviously know what they're doing, so the best you can hope for is "single blind," that the patient doesn't know, but even that is difficult, for the same reasons. --Leifern 14:49, 6 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

I don't see why. I'm sure it's more expensive, but not impossible. And more importantly, should be done. The result evaluators don't have to be the same people who administer the therapy, and in fact, should not be. Clearly, the test and control groups should be completely randomly selected. (There have been suggestions that Lovaas chose high functioning kids.) One group could be placed in free play and the other in ABA. Parents should not know which approach is being used either. It would also be nice if the experiment is carried out by an organization with no vested interest in the results. Neurodivergent 19:22, 6 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Another thing that occurs to me would be interesting is if the results not only compared functioning levels but also stress levels by some objective meassure, such as levels of cortisol. Neurodivergent 19:35, 6 November 2005 (UTC)Reply

Geeks and Nerds

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Am I the only one that finds this section a little rediculous? 1)This is hardly a controversy associated with autism, rather one associated with "geeks" and "nerds". 2) Geek/nerd are more colloquial stereotypes rather then accepted definitions for people - it would be the similar to saying "many smart people with lower perceived social skills may in reality be autistic". 3) How does one genetically test for geek/nerd status? It's a teasing comment/stereotype, not a verifiable set of "symptoms" or a "condition".Sparkleyone 09:14, 5 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Are you suggesting that 'nerd' is nothing but a social construct? That is, we've just picked one end of a behavioral spectrum and arbitrarily labeled it as 'nerd'. (Sorry, just being sarcastic). Neurodivergent 23:55, 5 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
That was a nice eloquent way of saying what I was trying to get across, yes. I'm sure my point has been made. Sparkleyone 07:59, 6 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
BTW, the geek article does mention this controversy already, and I believe it's considered problematic in that article as well. I recall the Asperger's article and perhaps the Autism community article mention this too. Neurodivergent 14:18, 6 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Thank you for your suggestion! When you feel an article needs improvement, please feel free to make those changes. Wikipedia is a wiki, so anyone can edit almost any article by simply following the Edit this page link at the top. You don't even need to log in (although there are many reasons why you might want to). The Wikipedia community encourages you to be bold in updating pages. Don't worry too much about making honest mistakes — they're likely to be found and corrected quickly. If you're not sure how editing works, check out how to edit a page, or use the sandbox to try out your editing skills. New contributors are always welcome.

--Mistress Selina Kyle (Α⇔Ω ¦ ⇒✉) 11:01, 6 January 2006 (UTC)Reply


Vaccinations

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I've made a heap of edits to this article today, and I'm not just trying to be argumentative, but it does seem that a) the vaccine controvery is blatantly POV, b) an unnamed source was trying to insert information about it in many sections where it wasn't relevent (such as epidemiology, where it could be mentioned logically, but rates wasn't even mentioned in the ramble) c) the content of each section was being mixed up. I'm not blatantly trying to get into a revert war here, but I think the section about "Mercury in Medicine" report should go altogether too Sparkleyone 08:39, 18 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

'New cases'

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As I've noted before, the 'new cases' wording is misleading. It suggests that's how many children are diagnosed each year in California. It's not. Unfortunately, the DDS data does not say how many children entered the system, and how many left. It only gives totals. All we can say is that the difference between those entering and those leaving is narrowing, but the number of those entering is still about 600-700 higher than those leaving every quarter. Clearly, the number of those leaving must be increasing. It's quite possible the number of those entering is increasing as well, although not as much. It could also be stable now (or decreasing if there's a reason for that.) Anyway, what I just said is probably 'original research' so I'm not sure how to address the 'new cases' wording, which is citable. Neurodivergent 17:01, 20 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

We can, however, cite the DDS data directly from the DDS - which shows that the rate in the youngest age groups is still going up. I'm not sure why removing claims contradicted by their own citations and data is supposed to be "Censorship". Michael Ralston 22:28, 20 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
I've checked the data myself, and there is, in fact, a slight decrease in the increase in the last few quarters. It's fine with me if the article mentions this, and it complies with 'easy verifiability'. Let's leave the 'new cases' wording out as it's contentious (and wrong as a matter of fact). Again, a decrease in the increase is to be expected. At some point the increase in cases should be similar to that of epilepsy, i.e. close to population growth levels. Except that a diagnosis of autism is more complex and involves subjectivity. Neurodivergent 02:18, 21 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
There's also the issue that the youngest age group is not showing a decrease in the increase yet - which is the ONLY one we would except to be affected by the removal of Thimerosal etc, if that had anything whatsoever to do with Autism. It should, in fact, be near 0 if the autism=mercury thing is true. it's not. Michael Ralston 01:24, 22 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
If it is true that thimerosal is a contributing factor to autism, the result of a phasing out of thimerosal would be exactly what we're seeing: the number of new cases going down. Setting aside no original research rules, this would be easy to show through a simulation. I think the point is that recent trends lend some support for the thimerosal hypothesis, though they don't prove it. That will take years - and if the hypothesis is true, many more afflicted kids. --Leifern 03:34, 22 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
Leifern. Please pay attention. The rate of autism in the youngest children, according to the DDS, is *still going up*. The "new cases" that you refer to (which is a phrase extremely misleading) include everyone who gets help from the DDS - even those sixty or older. The decrease in the rate of increase (which means the rate is still increasing, don't forget, and is still increasing FASTER than population growth) is found in the older individuals, those who if they're going to need help have probably already gotten into the system. If removal of thimerosal had anything to do with it, the "decrease" would be found primarily in the youngest age groups - it's found LEAST there. I've been trying to explain this for a little while now. The removal of a cause decreases the frequency of ACTUAL new cases - those that "would be" in individuals who were never exposed to the cause. Given that Thimerosal has been essentially gone from the vaccines given to children since 2003 at the LATEST, the rate in that age group should have crashed - unless Thimerosal had little-to-nothing to do with it. The rate hasn't crashed. Unless you subscribe to the claim that *any* thimerosal causes autism at the same rate, then it doesn't make sense - and that claim doesn't make sense either because the "epidemic" would be COMPLETELY unexplained if it were true. Michael Ralston 01:01, 23 January 2006 (UTC)Reply
This also seems to me to be the correct interpretation. There is another confounding factor as one would expect the age of diagnosis to steadily grow younger with increasing interest, usefulness of diagnosis, and provision of diagnostic testing, along with a reducing number of cases/chance of not being diagnosed until a later age, say 5. Midgley 23:02, 18 April 2006 (UTC)Reply
edit

This article contains lots of redundant information. The therapy sections should be merged into Autism therapies, the discussions of causes into Causes of autism, discussions on prevalence & incidence should be in Autism (incidence) and yet other things are just duplicates of information in the autism and Aspergers articles. Some things, like autistic vs person with autism probably belongs in the main articles. --Rdos 07:58, 11 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

Interesting approach. First the article gets trashed, and then its get nominated for deletion. Of course, several of the articles in question emerged as a result of this article. --Leifern 10:32, 11 April 2006 (UTC)Reply
Irrelevant. It does not matter if the sections first emerged here or not. They are clearly related to the parts of the autism and Aspergers articles that was moved to Causes of autism and Autism therapies. Additionally, all the crap about vaccines has been flooded into as many articles as possible. The action of removing it all is justified. Anything new can be put in the main articles instead. Besides, Leifern, your chronology is bad. I first nominated the article for deletion, then I attempted to fix the worst things in it, hoping some others would cooperate. If you and over anti-vaccine-pushers are not cooperative, I suppose the original deletion request was well founded. --Rdos 10:56, 11 April 2006 (UTC)Reply
Chronology is a recurrent theme... Midgley 23:04, 18 April 2006 (UTC)Reply
I like to think something more constructive than deletion could be done, but the article has serious problems; fundamentally it is making no distinction between autism and other conditions which superficially resemble it, including "geek" personality, which is a lifestyle, not a medical issue. Peter Grey 19:45, 11 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

I think deletion is not the solution. I think improving it is more appropriate. The world of autism is not standing still, next week could easily bring a new controversy which would then have to fight for space on another page. There are undoubtedly controversies in autism, so why not have a page to discuss them? AmyNelson 01:46, 16 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

References

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There were a lot, and they do not look very distinctive. I tend to agree with the user who deleted a bunch of them. WP is not a colelction of links. I reverted Ombudsman's reversion, since he had made no discussion of the change back. The "new" policy that was in fact cited by the previous editor was WP:EL which seems a good one. Midgley 23:07, 18 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

At least the links aren't as egregiously out of place as whale.to! Andrew73 19:04, 19 April 2006 (UTC)Reply
I examined the links before I removed them, converted those that were in-line into <ref> tags, and deleted the rest. Anything that's relevent (i.e. supports the material actually in the article) should be made into a footnote, everything else should go. - brenneman{L} 01:11, 21 April 2006 (UTC)Reply


What about mention of Robert Kennedy, Rolling Stones article? http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/7395411/deadly_immunity/ —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.166.122.57 (talk) 07:06, 28 December 2009 (UTC)Reply

Extensive Grammatical Updates (2006/05/21)

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I spent at least an hour cleaning up the grammar in this article and subsequently removed the request for cleanup. If anyone has any objections to the grammatical quality of the article, please correct the offending grammar or, if there are more requests than you care to clean up, replace the request for cleanup at the top of the page.

To increase the political correctness of the article, I reworded several phrases using person-first terminology. Though most people with autism often refer to themselves as 'autistics', it is common practice in modern psychiatry and medicine to use person-first terminology, which is less likely to offend anyone, regardless of whether or not he/she has autism. I have NOT changed, nor will I change, anything in the article that would diminish the fact that most people with autism do not use this terminology. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 207.81.79.221 (talkcontribs) 04:27, May 22, 2006

Intro

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i have added a line (admittedly directly from the autism article) to the intro here, as the old intro was basically a whole lot of lines saying nothing about what autism is. I know there is no definition that will make everyone happy, but it really needed something in the intro describing it with some content, rather than fluffing around saying that it's a disorder that no-one can agree upon a definition for. Sparkleyone 01:51, 29 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

Proposed name change

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Given that autism is a condition or disorder, and not a field of study, the current name is grammatically incorrect, and also runs contrary to the names of other similar articles in the Category:Medical controversies. Therefore, I intend to change the name to Autism controversies, unless somebody can make a persuasive case not to do so. I will check back in a couple of days. Cgingold 22:54, 28 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Looks like you have the go-ahead! --Crusio 21:56, 12 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

Genetics and autism

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This section needs cleaning up. It contains some factual inaccuracies (for complex characters it is not surprising at all to find an affected chikd of unaffected persons) and the quote at the end is certainly POV. It could be shortened simply to "A book by Jay Joseph released in 2006 denies the genetic evidence, however", or could be completely deleted (it's rather ludicrous of Joseph to claim there are only 4 minor genetic studies of autism), as it flies in the face of the genetic finding in the preceding phrase. --Crusio 21:56, 12 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

Tag

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Would someone mind pointing out specifically where the tag issues crop up in the article? Phyesalis (talk) 08:57, 20 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

It would be easier to say where don't they crop up. The only clean section is "Vaccines and autism".

  1. References and sources, self-explanatory, there are broad swatches of text and entire sections which cite no sources or no reliable sources.
  2. Neutrality, that tag has been there since March 2007. I can't speak for the person who added it, and the article has somewhat improved since then, but the imbalance in every section is apparent. Almost every section presents only one side of an argument, without mentioning counterarguments.
  3. Weasel words, have a look at WP:AWW and WP:WTA; the article is replete with them. The writing is vague and without attribution throughout ... Many in the autistic community, including some persons who are considered ... According to some reports ... Some studies suggest ... Cure oriented parents ... it is considered ... some people ... many people ... (without ever saying who these people are or providing a reliable sources) ... There is uncertainty. There are far too many to list. Almost the entire article is an unsourced, unattributed weasel. Strange because some of the article could be written in a balanced and neutral fashion from the Amy Harmon New York Times article (a reliable source).
  4. Essay follows from all of the above; unbalanced, weasle words, unsourced, unattributed = essay.
  5. Needs wikification, should be obvious. I could go through and wikify it, but since most of the text is unreliable and unsourced, that wouldn't be a productive use of time until after the article is cleaned up.
  6. General cleanup, I've been chipping away at the WP:MOS issues, so it's not so bad anymore. The references are unformatted, but again, until the article is correctly written and sourced, it doesn't make sense to spend a lot of time cleaning up formatting.

I hope this helps, SandyGeorgia (Talk) 13:23, 20 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Intelligence Tests

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Someone actually removed the citation for the 2007 study saying that RPM was a better intelligence test for autistics than the WISC. I wrote that paragraph or two a while ago, fairly shortly after the study came out, and I definitely included the citation when I first wrote it. I came back today and found that "citation needed" was added after every sentence. This is seriously intellectually dishonest.Ramiki (talk) 21:01, 7 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

No therapy ,not a disorder view

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There was a suggestion on Talk:Autism therapies that a deleted section there belongs here:

There is a view that autism is not a disorder, but a normal, healthy variation in neurological hard-wiring, and therefore does not need to be cured. This "anti-cure perspective" supports the model of autism that claims that autism is a fundamental part of who the autistic person is and that autism is something that cannot be separated from the person. A cure is seen as destroying the original personality of the individual and is perceived similar to attempts to "cure" homosexuality, therefore this perspective considers the disease classification insulting. In line with this belief an autistic culture has begun to develop similar to deaf culture. This view is usually held by autistic people themselves (Autism rights movement), and is mostly criticized by parents of autistic children.

This may be better addressed by linking to Sociological and cultural aspects of autism ?

--195.137.93.171 (talk) 19:58, 12 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

Maybe a typo?

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The article says the greater incidence of males versus females "could argue against a genetic theory". ...isn't that backwards? Gender-linked traits are quite commonly a strong indicator that there *is* a genetic component, not that there isn't.

The citation that this refers to is no longer online. Does anyone have hardcopy of the source to verify the (in)correctness of this statement? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.14.228.19 (talkcontribs)

Fixed it, thanks for the note. Auntie E. 17:07, 25 September 2009 (UTC)Reply

Unified Theory of Autism

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Author: Jeremy Turnbull (Psychotherapist specialising in Aspergers people) jezt@hotmail.com

There seems to be so much disagreement about Autism, everyone may have a piece of the jigsaw, so here's my attemp at a Unified theory, based on lots of freely available information.

Any good theory on Autism must address the diversity of persons who are labelled such, the complexity of symptoms, (can change over time) and will build on other theories, which in my opinion are not mutually exclusive. It must also address the increase in diagnosed cases in the last 30 years,which some refer to as an 'epidemic'.

Why do boys out number girls 4 to 1 with Autism? Why do some Autistics appear highly intelligent and others mentally retarded? Why do some cases not show up till around the age of 2?

The term Aspergers is bandied about these days in a way similar to, 'oh he's a Scorpio you know', it seems to be common and lots of people use it as a label (even my 10 year olds say, 'he's a bit aspie' about odd people on TV. So what criteria is this diagnosis based on, is it any more valid than an astrology fan's observation of behaviour? How accurate can this 'Label' be? Is Caetextia (context blindness) more accurate or just a different name?

Let's start at the beginning, what is Autism? We are all familiar with the DSM type description and I'm sure we have all come across many people given the diagnosis Autistic or Aspergers Syndrome (also known as High functioning Autism or Caetextia);

We can say Autistics have a lack of insight into the mental or internal life of others, don't see others' point of view, or have difficulty recognising others' emotions, and have impaired reactions in social situations as a consequence. (We could describe more symptoms, but I think you know them).

We could also describe Autistics as being in a 'Trance', or being in a trance state much of the time, depending on the severity of behavioural symptoms; Or daydreamy perhaps in the case of some Caetextics... dipping in and out of the REM state as we all do, but perhaps more frequently or in a different way?

In order to attempt to unpack the label 'Autistic', we need to look at the underlying mechanisms. The disorder was originally called 'Childhood Schizophrenia', but Autism has been recognised and documented widely since the fifties; the DSM symptoms can appear individually, or grouped, in many different situations, as they are only a description of behaviour, similar to other 'disorders'... such as extreme PTSD, Fragile X, retardation, accident victims with Brain injuries etc... so what actually makes a person Autistic? What is the mechanism of these symptoms?

How can the world's richest multi Billionaire, or a mega famous pop / film star, be said to have the same condition as a mute, mentally retarded individual who has spent their whole life in Psychiatric care, ie they are both called Autistic? How can that be? Does Caetextia clearly define the two groups or are they still on the same spectrum? Is it a question of degree of brain damage or is it something else? Is there something hiding beneath the surface which they share in common?

So far we know that something has failed to unfold in these individuals, Joe and Ivan allude to 'templates' not being present or expressed; They also drew attention to 'fish like' behaviours, which are our genetic inheritence, we all share gestures built on these patterns, but Autistics revert back to some of them more than others.

All of this may be true but doesn't provide a unified theory, or answer many of the questions which thousands of research scientists, parents and individuals are currently seeking answers to. (There are literally millions of pages related to Autism on the web, thousands of sites, web rings, research papers, blogs etc.)

So what does it all really mean: missing templates, lack of empathy, mirror neurons missing, emotional disorder, developmental disorder, maternal bonding, No theory of mind...what happened to these individuals, why, how, where and when did they become Autistic?

At it's heart we could say, 'The Autistic baby has failed to make deep emotional contact with mother or father, or another Human being.' This is crucial, this refers to the deepest level of non verbal, non cognitive connection to other humans. (Emotion is the mind's primary architect and is responsible for much cognitive functional development.)

We talk about maternal bonding, but what does it mean? Love? Everyone tells new mums how important it is, but no one can explain exactly what it is; Skin on skin, breast feeding, hugs? No, they are just physical-functional, (nice to 'normal' babies, not usually of much interest to Autistic babies, although some do not resist physical contact, many do not enjoy it). Mothers tell of their baby not bonding, crying excessively, not making eye contact or showing 'Love' back.

Is this innate capacity to show Deep emotion, or connection to other Humans missing in Caetextics or Autistic persons. Of course, they do show the basic primary emotions, such as anger, anxiety and so on. There is something within us which can express a very deep feeling for others, a connection or bond, which does not appear to be working in Autistic persons. (they are not the only ones who have this dysfunction, psychopaths, some schizoids and others who can even appear 'normal,' seem to lack this ability)

Beyond primary emotions, beyond laughter, recognition, obsession, lust, romance etc. I believe there is something at our core, of being a warm, empathic, compassionate, caring, functional human being; Beyond words, but perhaps 'a capacity to love' or 'bond at the deepest feeling level'...in the true sense of the words, to really 'care', not shallow, temporary or fake. Sadly this innate capacity is not activated in everyone.

What happened to the Autistic baby? Perhaps the newborn has become distressed and used his Pre social cognition skills, (non verbal) to soothe himself, to take his or her self away from emotional pain or distress. That is to say he has learned that if he focusses on certain things, he can go into a TRANCE and escape painful feelings. (an intelligent thing to do, but not good for mother or development) Some babies will employ the mother as a soother or trance inducer, seeking rocking, swinging or certain sounds to be repeated.

Once learnt these trance inducing behaviours can continue into adulthood, perhaps as a method of avoiding strong emotional feelings; Autistics are often very anxious, fearful and sensitive. A good way to escape such feelings is trance. Repetitive stereotypies, self stimulation or stimming, water, watching spinning things or spinning itself, all lead to a trance state.(As Joe said, like the Whirling Dervish, or a raver induces trance.)

We could say Autism results in a kind of anxiety disorder, Which is of course unpleasant, and perhaps by focussing away from others, onto objects or trance inducing activity, they escape their pain? (Breaking trance when they feel it's essential). While attention is focussed on stimming, others will be blocked out, almost like a drug, it is more rewarding than what others usually have to offer.

Certainly many parents and teachers have declared war on the Autistic trance, or attempt to connect through entering the stimming behaviour. It can help build connections and improve social interaction, but it can take years of effort with no improvement in real deep emotional contact, although still worthwhile. (I don't think it is always appropriate to break trance, if it causes too much distress, or hugging too much etc. it doesn't change the real emotional connection issue which is NOT physical or cognitive) It is best to foster deep feelings and emotional connection where possible, at least to some degree.

In order to Upkeep TRANCE, actions include: Isolation, sameness, staring at objects, repetitive routines, avoid eye contact, ignore people, temper, self harm, repetitive mantra speech, repetitive movement, spinning, head banging, wheels, rocking, watching video over, rituals, stereotyped mannerisms.

Outcome of TRANCE includes: Inability to relate to others, isolation, language failure, narrow interest, clumsiness, selective deafness, lack of fear, lack of pain, seems in shell or own world, dreamy, obsessed, no eye contact, ignorant, lack of affection, lack of smiles, loss of aquired speech, lack of 'emotion', restricted interest etc.

Clearly, Autistics can substitute cortical function for arrested emotion, as life goes on, as clearly seen in the case of Caetextia or Aspergers; ie learn to immitate others in social situations or, like actors, try to 'fake' emotions, often confusing obsession, control, lust or jealousy etc. with love.

We have a picture of behaviour (psychology), but what is going on in the brain? (Neurology) What may have caused it?(biology?)

Let's look at Functional lateralization (right-left); Let's start with High functioning Autism (or Aspergers). It seems to be that this involves LEFT brain dominance : Reasoning, grammar, Mathematics, logic, abstract intelligence, computers etc.

It also appears the RIGHT hemisphere is working less well in Autistic persons in general :Self awareness, emotional expression, Theory of mind, metaphor, social behaviours etc. It may be overwhelmed by left brain, not necessarily damaged.

Left brain traits are often rewarded in modern society, hence the success of many Aspergers persons in computers, Mathematics and so on. Indeed, it is said that without them computer code would be years behind and in Silicon Valley USA, Autism rates are said to be abnormally high. Basically, a high internal locus of control, low emotional attachment and high motivation, are seen in many high achievers.

Is it possible to confuse certain behaviour with Caetextia? a person whose life experience may make them appear odd or cold, or maybe they never socialised as much, or grew up in an unemotional family and may be left brained, can appear to be Caetextic, but may actually be a little eccentric or emotionally defensive (or may be dreamy dope smokers). It is easy to misdiagnose, the real question is are they capable of deep emotions or deep feeling contact with others?

This leads us even deeper into the brain, what could cause this situation? The Amygdala processes sensory information, such as facial expressions, eye gaze directions, body postures, movements for modulation of appropriate social and emotional responses to others. Damage or lesions to the Amygdala, in animals and humans, leads to Autistic type symptoms; if the damage is spread to hippocampus and temporal lobe the affect of Autistic damage is greatly increased. (Amygdala abnormalities have been found in ASD autopsies, eg neuronal density) what about the 'defalt state', REM and brain function?

The evidence seems to point to the Amygdala - Orbito Frontal Cortex neural circuit dysfunction. Early damage to Amygdala and Hippocampus has widespread secondary damage to cortex, striatum (self control) and developing neural sysytems. The brain is an integrated system, where plasticity affects neural networks and integrated wiring between different brain areas. Amygdala damage can cause severe social impairment and disrupts the ability to assign meaning to social stimuli, but leaves good cognitive intelligence (plenty of Amygdala lesion research has been done on apes and animals).

The Cerebellum (previously thought to be simple in function) is complex and also relevant in this equation, it modulates higher cognitive functions, filters sensory information to aid understanding of environment, it co-ordinates attention and perception, aswell as it's role in movement. Operations to remove tumours in kids in the Cerebellum have left them Autistic. (abnormalities have been found in Autistic persons)

This neural circuit, Amygdala - Frontal cortex, reaches functional maturity at around 30 months (it continues to develop into adulthood) and is responsible for socioemotional development. The Amygdala is working at birth, but the frontal circuit is not completed till later. This is important;

If the Amygdala (fear, social behaviour etc) is damaged to some degree at birth, the extent of emotional dysfunction will be greater (visible from early on, even at birth). If the Cortical circuit is dysfunctional it may not be visible untill 2 to 3 years of age, when it kicks in. This explains why the signs of Autism may not be obvious early on and can coincide with MMR type jabs (crucial point).

Why are some people Caetextic and some severely Autistic? It seems whereabouts the dysfunction is greatest in the Amygdala-Orbito Frontal cortex-temporal lobe network, will affect where on the continuum a person may appear; also the extent of secondary damage and how early it occurred; cerebellum damage indicates early pregnancy, cortical damage can occur later.

Aswell as brain dysfunction being evident in Autism, so are high levels of Dopamine and low levels of Sertonin; This is also significant, Seretonin is critical in brain development, it plays a big role in cortical organisation, dentric and synaptic elaboration in children.

However, the Dopamine (Da) issue is of greater significance, indeed it may hold the key to increases in Autism today. Much research has been done on Human, ape and animal Da production in mothers and babies.

The LEFT hemisphere is Dopamine dominant, which also seems to dominate in Autism (also Schizophrenia, Bi Polar, OCD, racing thoughts etc ) and is a feature of high order intelligence and motivation Aspergers).

High Da levels inhibit Amygdala function and tests have shown higher levels of Da correlate with stereotypy seen in Autism. Anti Da drugs (eg neuroleptic haloperidol) are most common for reducing Autistic behaviour, but don't help with social interaction (deep emotion).

It seems that Hyperdopaminergic activity in a new baby can cause Autistic brain dysfunction, that is to say chronic levels of Dopamine during formation of the brain and neural circuits can cause the brain malfunctions previously mentioned, resulting in Autism. This must be caused by factors which are either Genetic, prenatal, perinatal or post natal...or perhaps a mixture?

Obviously these elevated levels of Da have to come from the mother, so what are the causes of Hyperdopamine activity in the mother? Does this explain the rise of Autism in the last 30 years? Perhaps it does?(10 times more Autism in Industrialised nations, even though Autistics rarely marry or have kids.)

Mothers can raise their Da levels in various ways; Chronic levels of psychosocial stress, especially from relationship problems, or work related stress (at least 10 times more mothers are in stressful jobs now than in the 70s);

High achievment for mothers, college (10 times more graduate women than in previous decades, indicating potentially high Da levels in their brains), demanding jobs, juggling home, kids and husbands have all increased stress on mothers, which can cause high Dopamine levels during pregnancy. Urban settings (already linked with child Schizo disorders) are more stressful for pregnant women (many smaller places are also rated 'urban stressed' nowadays), poor diet, fevers, heat waves, medication (39% of Autistic mothers were found to be on meds during pregnancy in 2003).

Stimulants and sleeping pills can all increase Da levels in pregnant women, also environmental toxins, such as mercury, vaccines, dental fillings and power plants have all got potential to increase Da levels(though not as common). Poor quality, or lack of, sleep also elevates Da. Research has shown family discord was present during pregnancy, in 10 times more mothers of Autistic kids, (a high incidence with educated higher socioeconomic mothers is also shown ins studies).

Maternal age affects Da level in mothers, women over 30 tend to have lower Oestrogen levels as they get older (which protects against Dopamine overactivation): The three main steroid hormones in women are Estrone (e1 present in menopause), Estradiol (e2 non pregnant women) and Estriol (pregnancy) and these hormones dock with receptors which up-regulate the expression of genes, also affecting brain development... another factor in Autistic brains?

Birth trauma will also raise Da levels; for example, Cesarean section: This procedure is more likely over the age of 30, and with 1st child (The evidence shows 1st born are 100 times more likely to be Autistic). Cesarean births were at 5% in 1970 and up to 27.5% in USA in 2003. (A huge rise in medical intervention during stressful births has been recorded in UK).

Combine these factors with MALE offspring: Autistic boys outnumber the girls 4 to 1, and Prenatal exposure to testosterone causes higher facilitation of Dopamine (it has been shown that estrogen exposure clearly inhibits Da). The stress hormone Cortisol also raises Da activity, as can deficiency in Omega 3 and 6, iodine (precursor for Thyroxine which enhances Da synthesis) and Tyrosine (precursor for Da), these deficiencies are known to lead to cases of retardation and Cretinism in extreme cases.

Also interesting is the fact that an identical twin is 60% more likely to be Autistic and a fraternal twin 5%. (the same with ADHD) This is often used to justify genetic arguments, but when one considers that only 60% of identical twins share a placenta, and that Dizogotic (fraternal) twins never share a placenta, it changes that assumption somewhat. Identical twins share 100% DNA, so if it were a gene you might expect them both to share the same condition. However, they do share a womb and postnatal environment. (Tuberous Sclerosis and Fragile X researchers have also made links to Autism and Da)

DBH enzyme has been found to be twice as likely to be missing in mothers of Autistic kids (needed to convert and reduce Dopamine). Deletion of maternal DBH gene occurs in 15 to 20% of population, and could, combined with some of the other factors mentioned, result in Hyper chronic levels of Dopamine in the mother, womb and babies' developing brains, it is hypothesised it can be high enough to cause Autism.

On the search for an Autistic gene we find much confusion and although hundreds of top scientists in well funded teams have tried to find such a link for over 30 years, they admit so far they have found no Autism gene. (despite numerous family studies, twin studies etc.) Could something else be responsible for the sharp rise in cases, given the Gene pool changes very slowly. (increased awareness and diagnosis may make a contribution to the figures, but not on the scale we see reported).

Suspect genes in research studies have included:Chromosomes 2q,7q,15q,16p; other studies suspected chromosomes 4,8,9,10,11,12,17,18,19,20 and X. Still further suspects were 7q and neuroligin 3 and 4. (that about covers the whole brain). No agreement and no evidence is currently available. The search has been as successful as the search for the Depression gene, Schizoid gene and the ADHD gene, which seem to take up plenty of research time, but none of these have been found to date.

It seems there are a huge number of variables which can affect Autistic outcome, both physical and environmental; especially important is the overall situation in the womb and the child's interaction with the world after birth. So many genes are involved in brain architecture, that it seems unlikely to many Genetic specialists, that an Autistic gene will be found in the near future. There is a potential risk to every embryo, making prediction or genetic repair virtually impossible, and the label covers such a diverse group, even diagnosis can be inaccurate.

'There is no unequivocal evidence for candidate genes that confer susceptibility to the condition.' (Emily Simonoff, in her recent paper on Autism. She is Professor of child Psychiatry at Guys, king & St Thomas medical school & Institute of Psychiatry, London, a specialist in Genetic epidemiology & behavioural genetics, researcher in Gene-environmental interplay in child disorders.)

(This is my understanding of the work of many hardworking researchers and projects around the world.)

Best wishes, Jeremy —Preceding unsigned comment added by 81.154.45.212 (talk) 20:54, 18 November 2009 (UTC)Reply

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I have posted a bibliography of Intelligence Citations for the use of all Wikipedians who have occasion to edit articles on human intelligence and related issues. I happen to have circulating access to a huge academic research library at a university with an active research program in those issues (and to another library that is one of the ten largest public library systems in the United States) and have been researching these issues since 1989. You are welcome to use these citations for your own research and to suggest new sources to me by comments on that page. -- WeijiBaikeBianji (talk) 16:53, 4 July 2010 (UTC)Reply

Implausibility of biological action

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That phrase feels vaguley polemical... yes, I'm aware that it's for the right side, but that still doesn't make it feel encyclopedia-e... Thoughts? Egg Centric (talk) 16:03, 4 February 2011 (UTC)Reply

I'm open to adjustment. The MMR vaccine theory is based on fraud, the thiomersal theory was plausible but disproven, and the vaccine overload theory was/is implausible. Open to suggestions to more clearly describe them. Yobol (talk) 16:05, 4 February 2011 (UTC)Reply
I think you could actually put that, but expanded. It's the glib "these are implausible, nothing to see here" thing that doesn't seem right... further explanation (probably a copy and paste from an appropriate article) should do. Egg Centric (talk) 17:35, 4 February 2011 (UTC)Reply
Section needed to be expanded anyways. Will get to it soon. Yobol (talk) 18:38, 4 February 2011 (UTC)Reply
...and done. Let me know if you think there's something I missed or any other suggestions. Yobol (talk) 02:38, 5 February 2011 (UTC)Reply
Looks great to me :) Egg Centric (talk) 00:48, 6 February 2011 (UTC)Reply

Joint attention

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The current version of this section doesn't make clear what the controversy is about. Would someone please reword it to state a specific proposition that some people think is true and some people think is false? The last sentence is "The empirical data supporting the latter hypothesis has been questioned." Would someone please replace that with a brief summary of that empirical data and the basis for doubting it (or doubting an inference from the data, if that's really what this is about)? If there really is no well-covered controversy here, then please feel free to delete the entire section. —Ben Kovitz (talk) 08:57, 30 June 2012 (UTC)Reply

Poor parenting/poor mothering hypothesis

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It was common to blame autism disorders on poor parenting, particularly a cold, detached mother, a few decades ago. This would be worth adding to the article. OttawaAC (talk) 14:43, 18 August 2012 (UTC)Reply

Original research on Intelligence?

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"One of the criteria for Asperger's syndrome is that there is no clinically significant delay in cognitive development;[1] which means that no one with Asperger's syndrome can have mental retardation."

Is not something wrong here? The conclusion might be absolutely correct, but does it really follow from the sourced statement? And should an editor draw conclusions in this way? --~~ — Preceding unsigned comment added by 90.130.235.89 (talk) 17:37, 22 December 2012 (UTC)Reply
Hi, it's me who wrote this and even though it sounds like my own conclusion, I should have written: "By definition, the diagnosis of Asperger's excludes mental retardation", or something like that. I'll find a better source though, as I have understood that this source is not preferred. Lova Falk talk 10:58, 28 December 2012 (UTC)Reply
I understand why you want to say that, and the idiot who used the term "retardation" needs shooting, but that's not what the source actually says. I corrected it. The message is clear enough from the actual text, fortunately. Guy (Help!) 13:58, 16 December 2013 (UTC)Reply
Here is the idiot you feel like shooting.   To my defense, at the time when I wrote this 1) the term "mental retardation" was still the one in use 2) I was not aware that this term had become controversial. Lova Falk talk 20:37, 4 January 2014 (UTC)Reply

Autism Speaks and the cure debate

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I surprised to see no sign of the pro-/anti-cure perspective in this article. Autism Speaks in particular is the most famous autism-related organization, but also controversial due to their pro-cure position. Organizations with similar mission statements are similarly controversial, but none have received the same level of attention. It is very strange to omit such a controversial topic in an article with "controversies" in the title. Muffinator (talk) 02:17, 13 July 2014 (UTC)Reply

Do you have a specific suggestion for improvement? -- Brangifer (talk) 02:24, 13 July 2014 (UTC)Reply
Yes, I do: Add a new section with a title along the lines of "the cure debate" (I say "along the lines" because no RSs I know of use that exact phrase) describing the sentiments of pro-cure groups such as Autism Speaks as well as anti-cure groups such as the Autistic Self Advocacy Network. Muffinator (talk) 05:20, 13 July 2014 (UTC)Reply