I don't know. An article that was linked in with the article I posted earlier was talking about Autism Spectrum Disorder - covering everybody. I'd presume they're also referring to people who are or would be diagnosed with Asperger's; they do talk about person with high IQs in there.
Dysmorphology as biomarker for the study of autism | Spectrum
Simon Baron-Cohen, a professor at the University of Cambridge has also pointed out that in autistic children the brain develops faster with more neuron connections and ends up larger than the typical brain. As he said the the documentary, 'My Curious Documentary'.
Yes, they have been able to spot differences in people's brains who have Anti-Social Personality Disorder. Although not enough to be used in the diagnosis stage. This isn't too much of a surprise, there's a range of mental illnesses that also have physiological differences, schizophrenia is a very well known one, depression too. In depression areas of the brain such as the hippocampus actually shrink and can take months to return to normal when a person is fighting back against it. Instead of looking at mental disorders as being all in the mind - a construction of electronical signals, we should be looking at them no differently than physical conditions. If people looked at them like that then a lot of the stigma would dissipate.
The difference between the physiological signs in illnesses like depression and anxiety disorders is that these signs can be changed over time with the correct treatment. Autism is a development condition and therefore has a lot more stable changes to the brain.