SFARI blog article depiction of a resting "Autism" brain accompanying
review of study employing only Aspergers subjects as representing
"autism" for comparison with non autistic resting brains
SFARI continues its agenda of misrepresenting high functioning autism/aspergers only studies as representing "autism". It has published, on its blog page, several study reviews employing only high functioning autism or Aspergers subjects as "autism" studies, knowing that the "Autism Spectrum Disorder" is marked by substantial variation, complexity, heterogeneity. The World Health Organization, September 2013 indicated that 50% of persons on the "autism" spectrum also have intellectual disabilities. The fact that intellectual disability is so heavily represented on the autism spectrum has been known to extremely well informed, exceptionally intelligent sources like SFARI for decades as articulated by CDC autism expert Dr. Marsha Lynn Yeargin-Allsopp who stated that the intellectually disabled represented the "vast majority" of persons on the pre-DSM-IV autism spectrum. Yet SFARI publishes articles and titles equating "Aspergers" or "high functioning autism" with the entire autism spectrum as it has done again with its review of a study of activity in resting "autism brains" (emphasis added):
21 February 2014
"Even at rest, the brains of people with autism manage more information than those of their peers, according to a new study that may provide support for the so-called ‘intense world’ theory of autism.
The research, which was published 24 December in Frontiers in Neuroinformatics, included nine children with Asperger syndrome, aged between 6 and 14 and ten age-matched typical children. The researchers scanned their brains using magnetoencephalography (MEG), a noninvasive method that doesn’t require lying in a noisy, confined space as magnetic resonance imaging does.?"
SFARI publishes a disclaimer on the bottom of its blog page stating that "News and Opinion articles on SFARI.org are editorially independent of the Simons Foundation." The disclaimer may well provide SFARI with protection against any hypothetical legal liability for the contents of its blog pages but it does not change the reality that SFARI determines who can publish on its site and is helping to promote a gross misrepresentation of the nature of autism disorders by helping equate Aspergers with the entire autism spectrum a task already, unfortunately, under way with the DSM-5 unified description of the various autism disorders.
I also understand very well, as the father of a son with severe autism disorder and intellectual disability, now 18, that the inclusion of persons with severe, low functioning autism in MRI studies would be extremely difficult and probably impossible. Articles that use only Aspergers or High Functioning Autism should be described in those terms throughout the article and title and conclusions should not be drawn about persons whose intellectual disability precludes their participation in the study.
SFARI's failure to ensure that writers using their site privileges do not generalize to the entire autism spectrum of disorders studies involving only High Functioning Autism/Aspergers subjects is not supported by evidence and is irresponsible.
We have high functioning autism which has a cult like following.
ReplyDeleteWe have severe or low functioning autism which no one wants to talk about.
If someone has autism but does not add the words high or severe. What does this mean?
I have come to the conclusion that research involving only those that exhibit the "savant" side of what sometimes appears in those who have autism (what's the percentage? Something like 2%?)is geared toward ultimately finding ways to harness that hyper functionning. Aside from pandering to certain neurodiversity ideologues and their need to be superior,it has nothing to do with "understanding" autism or "curing" autism but in fact is more expressive of a desire to make "smarter" human beings. Sounds creepy, but I wouldn't put it past the powers that be.
ReplyDeleteAccording to the Child Psych on Thurs... "we don't have the technology to see how the brain is damaged/rewired". When I mentioned wanting an MRI for my eldest to see how it's wired...
ReplyDeleteSo all these MRI's etc make you go... hmmmmmmmmm.... eh??
This is a concern beyond what SFARI publishes.
ReplyDeleteMainstream news media outlets such as CNN pick up these stories
and report autism updates based on their findings.