„Das Autismus-Spektrum ist gescheitert“ - TheoBlog.de

Die in London lehrende Deutsche Uta Frith ist eine Pionierin der Autismusforschung. Sie trug maßgeblich dazu bei, den Begriff „Spektrum“ zu etablieren.

TheoBlog.de

Replying to Uta Frith's views, one by one.

With thanks to all the members of the autistic community who've informed me & inspired me to write this thread.

For those lucky not to know about her article in The Times, and various other related statements, links at the end.

CW: it's upsetting 😟

A thread 🧵

#UtaFrith #Research #Autism #Autistic #ActuallyAutistic #Neurodivergent

This article is interesting but probably too vague for the casual reader (myself) to draw any insight from.

They list young diagnosis as before 6 and late diagnosis as after 10, and not after 50 for instance. I know that is in keeping with the science but I can't draw any information from this that pertains to myself. Who knows whether I would have been diagnosed young or not, had I been born recently.

Also, if you read through to the research in "Nature" the details seem even less worthy of a headline.

And this quote smells a lot like bullhuckey, even though the Professor is clearly one of the big, good eggs, so I wonder if it is taken out of context: “It is time to realise that ‘autism’ has become a ragbag of different conditions.” - Prof. Uta Frith

I will be interested to hear the #actuallyautistic scientists offering their opinions.

#actuallyautistic #utafrith #autism

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/oct/01/autism-should-not-be-seen-as-single-condition-with-one-cause-say-scientists?CMP=share_btn_url

Autism should not be seen as single condition with one cause, say scientists

Those diagnosed as small children typically have distinct genetic profile from those diagnosed later, study finds

The Guardian
The bright side of being autistic | Embrace Autism

Positive autistic experiences are not often discussed. So here is my list of more positive or wondrous aspects of what it’s like to be autistic. What are yours?

Embrace Autism