A Stanford study which excluded autistic subjects with intellectual disability is being used to spread the false notion that autism is not a disability ... just a difference. This misrepresentation of autism disorders appears in the August 16, 2013 San Jose Mercury News (I added the underlining, HLD):
"Autistic kids with math abilities show different brain patterns
There is no mention of the fact that approximately 50% of persons with autism disorders have intellectual disabilities according to the World Health Organization, have intellectual disability. The San Jose Mercury News article does go on to acknowledge that some persons with autism may also suffer from profound "retardation" but downplays it by going on in the same sentence goes to state some also have savant abilities.:
"Autism comes in many forms. It can be a devastating diagnosis with profound retardation. But people can also have exceptional skills or talents, known as "savant" abilities."
The Stanford School of Medicine report on the study wasn't any better in so far as it describes the study as involving only high functioning autistic subjects but makes no mention of the 50% with autism AND intellectual disability. It generalizes the results to persons with autism and while it does refers to deficits in autism it refers only to social communication deficits, repetitive behaviors and restricted interests. The article makes no mention of the intellectual disability which restricts the lives of approximately 50% of persons with autism disorders:
"Children with autism and average IQs consistently
demonstrated superior math skills compared with nonautistic children in the
same IQ range, according to a study by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital.
There appears to be a unique pattern of brain organization that underlies
superior problem-solving abilities in children with autism,” said Vinod Menon, PhD,
professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and a member of the Child
Health Research Institute at Packard Children's.
The autistic children’s enhanced math abilities were tied to patterns of
activation in a particular area of their brains — an area normally associated
with recognizing faces and visual objects.
Menon is senior author of the study, published online Aug. 17 in Biological
Psychiatry. Postdoctoral scholar Teresa
luculano, PhD, is the lead author.
Children with autism have difficulty with social interactions, especially
interpreting nonverbal cues in face-to-face conversations. They often engage in
repetitive behaviors and have a restricted range of interests.
But in addition to such deficits, children with autism sometimes exhibit
exceptional skills or talents, known as savant abilities. For example, some can
instantly recall the day of the week of any calendar date within a particular
range of years — for example, that May 21, 1982, was a Friday. And some display
superior mathematical skills. "
.................
The research team is now gathering data from a larger group
of children with autism to learn more about individual differences in their
mathematical abilities. Menon emphasized that not all children with autism have
superior math abilities, and that understanding the neural basis of variations
in problem-solving abilities is an important topic for future research."
2 comments:
"n"eurodiversity is a good thing. Neurodiversity is anything but diverse. And this sstudy just shows how the APA has effectively screwed the pooch for EVERYONE. The APA has been trying to prove their scientific mettle sine the late 1800s. The DSM is one of their horribly failed attemtpts... and it just seems to get worse every time the APA "improves" it (with several notable exceptions, such as the pathologizing of homosexuality, and their entire take on females.)
This is next to insanity. Let's start saying the same for people with Schizophrenia who only have minimal to moderate hallucinations.
It isn't a mental illness or a disability at all. The vivid hallucinations just make them even more create! -_-
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