Michael Marshall
New Member
Hi folks,
My name is Michael Marshall and I am a freelance science journalist.
I am writing a feature article for New Scientist about research studies that attempt to identify consistent subtypes of autism. I should say at the outset that the researchers are not trying to revive outdated concepts like Asperger's or high- vs low-functioning autism. Instead the researchers are looking for traits that tend to co-occur in lots of people, and trying to trace these back down through changes in brain wiring, all the way down to genetic variants. They describe their work as trying to understand the biological roots of autism, especially why autism can be so variable.
One of the studies was discussed on the forum here: Four clinically and biologically distinct subtypes of autism identified in major study
I'm keen to interview an autistic person, to get a sense of how this research might affect autistic people. Might it be beneficial, e.g. more personalised guidance and accommodations? Might it be harmful, e.g. stigmatisation? Might it make no difference at all?
If anyone is interested in taking part, please reply and we can take it from there.
Please have a look at my portfolio authory.com/MichaelMarshall and website michaelcmarshall.com to get a sense of my work.
Many thanks,
Michael
My name is Michael Marshall and I am a freelance science journalist.
I am writing a feature article for New Scientist about research studies that attempt to identify consistent subtypes of autism. I should say at the outset that the researchers are not trying to revive outdated concepts like Asperger's or high- vs low-functioning autism. Instead the researchers are looking for traits that tend to co-occur in lots of people, and trying to trace these back down through changes in brain wiring, all the way down to genetic variants. They describe their work as trying to understand the biological roots of autism, especially why autism can be so variable.
One of the studies was discussed on the forum here: Four clinically and biologically distinct subtypes of autism identified in major study
I'm keen to interview an autistic person, to get a sense of how this research might affect autistic people. Might it be beneficial, e.g. more personalised guidance and accommodations? Might it be harmful, e.g. stigmatisation? Might it make no difference at all?
If anyone is interested in taking part, please reply and we can take it from there.
Please have a look at my portfolio authory.com/MichaelMarshall and website michaelcmarshall.com to get a sense of my work.
Many thanks,
Michael