ancusmitis
Well-Known Member
This is off of something that progster said in one of the (numerous) IQ threads.
This is something I have heard before and early researchers mention it, but I don't seem to hear or see a lot about it that is very recent. I know there is a trend of interpreting autism as exclusively social, but the original populations Asperger and Kanner studied had a lot more things in common than just social/communication issues. This is one of them.
Autism, of course, has been redefined multiple times since then. So I'm curious. Does anyone else feel this applies to them? Are there things you struggle with even though they are "easy" while you excel at things people consider "hard?" Did you meet some milestones early and others late?
I don't believe that autism itself affects IQ, as IQ levels among the autisic population are so varied, but is often the case that many autistic people have an uneven spread of abilities - for example, being very mathetically minded, but not good at learning languages - or, in my case, the opposite.
This is something I have heard before and early researchers mention it, but I don't seem to hear or see a lot about it that is very recent. I know there is a trend of interpreting autism as exclusively social, but the original populations Asperger and Kanner studied had a lot more things in common than just social/communication issues. This is one of them.
Autism, of course, has been redefined multiple times since then. So I'm curious. Does anyone else feel this applies to them? Are there things you struggle with even though they are "easy" while you excel at things people consider "hard?" Did you meet some milestones early and others late?