Difference between revisions of "User:PsychoNerd054/Autism"
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==Autism as a "Spectrum"== | ==Autism as a "Spectrum"== | ||
Autism has always been understood as a "spectrum". For the sake of example, we can compare this "spectrum" as akin to something more familiar, such as the color spectrum. | Autism has always been understood as a "spectrum". For the sake of example, we can compare this "spectrum" as akin to something more familiar, such as the color spectrum. Like with the color spectrum, the autism "spectrum" is represented in various ways, accounting for different things. | ||
==="High" and "Low" Functioning Autism=== | ==="High" and "Low" Functioning Autism=== | ||
Revision as of 20:51, 16 May 2025
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This page is all about the 'tism, as explained by an actual autist.[note 1]
Autism as a "Spectrum"
Autism has always been understood as a "spectrum". For the sake of example, we can compare this "spectrum" as akin to something more familiar, such as the color spectrum. Like with the color spectrum, the autism "spectrum" is represented in various ways, accounting for different things.
"High" and "Low" Functioning Autism
When most people think of autism as a "spectrum", they think of it in terms of one's "functionality", that being the amount of support that one requires to live their life. This scale ranges from "high functioning", where they need little to no assistance and actually act no different from an average person; above average intelligence-wise even; to "low functioning", where they're so braindead that they absolutely must be kept an eye on as they're on their tablet to make sure they don't bash themselves on the head or crap their pants.
However, outside of whatever moral implications may come about from generalizing people as being bumbling tards for being autistic alone, this type of scale has severe limitations.
Notes
- ↑ I don't mean this in the insulting way. I actually am autistic.