What
is Autism?
Autism
is a brain disorder that typically
affects a person's ability to communicate,
form relationships with others, and
respond appropriately to the environment.
Some people with autism are relatively
high-functioning, with speech and
intelligence intact. Others are mentally
retarded, mute, or have serious
language delays. For some, autism
makes them seem closed off and shut
down; others seem locked into repetitive
behaviors and rigid patterns of thinking.
Although
people with autism do not have exactly
the same symptoms and deficits, they
tend to share certain social, communication,
motor, and sensory problems that affect
their behavior in predictable ways.
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Difference
in the Behaviors of Infants
With and Without Autism
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Infants with Autism
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Normal Infants
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Communication
- Avoid
eye contact
- Seem
deaf
- Start
developing language, then
abruptly stop talking altogether
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- Study
mother's face
- Easily
stimulated by sounds
- Keep
adding to vocabulary and expanding
grammatical usage
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Social
relationships
- Act
as if unaware of the coming
and going of others
- Physically
attack and injure others without
provocation
- Inaccessible,
as if in a shell
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- Cry
when mother leaves the room
and are anxious with strangers
- Easily
stimulated by sounds
- Recognize
familiar faces and smile
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Exploration
of environment
- Remain
fixated on a single item or
activity
- Practice
strange actions like rocking
or hand-flapping
- Sniff
or lick toys
- Show
no sensitivity to burns or
bruises, and engage in self-mutilation,
such as eye gouging
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- Move
from one engrossing object
or activity to another
- Use
body purposefully to reach
or acquire objects
- Explore
and play with toys
- Seek
pleasure and avoid pain
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NOTE:
This list is not intended to be used
to assess whether a particular child
has autism. Diagnosis should only
be done by a specialist using highly
detailed background information and
behavioral observations.
Social
symptoms
From
the start, most infants are social
beings. Early in life, they gaze at
people, turn toward voices, endearingly
grasp a finger, and even smile.
In
contrast, most children
with autism seem to have tremendous
difficulty learning to engage in the
give-and-take of everyday human interaction.
Even in the first few months of life,
many do not interact and they avoid
eye contact. They seem to prefer being
alone. They may resist attention and
affection or passively accept hugs
and cuddling. Later, they seldom seek
comfort or respond to anger or affection.
Unlike other children, they rarely
become upset when the parent leaves
or show pleasure when the parent returns.
Parents who looked forward to the
joys of cuddling, teaching, and playing
with their child may feel crushed
by this lack
of response.
Children
with autism also take longer to learn
to interpret what others are thinking
and feeling. Subtle social cues-whether
a smile, a wink, or a grimace-may
have little meaning. To a child who
misses these cues, "Come here,"
always means the same thing, whether
the speaker is smiling and extending
her arms for a hug or squinting and
planting her fists on her hips. Without
the ability to interpret gestures
and facial expressions, the social
world may seem bewildering.
To
compound the problem, people with
autism have problems seeing things
from another person's perspective.
Most 5-year-olds understand that other
people have different information,
feelings, and goals than they have.
A person with autism may lack such
understanding. This inability leaves
them unable to predict or understand
other people's actions.
Some
people with autism also tend to
be physically aggressive at times,
making social relationships still
more difficult. Some lose control,
particularly when they're in a strange
or overwhelming environment, or when
angry and frustrated. They are capable
at times of breaking things, attacking
others, or harming themselves. Alan,
for example, may fall into a rage,
biting and kicking when he is frustrated
or angry. Paul, when tense or overwhelmed,
may break a window or throw things.
Others are self-destructive, banging
their heads, pulling their hair, or
biting their arms.
Language
difficulties
By
age 3, most children have passed several
predictable milestones on the
path to learning language. One of
the earliest is babbling. By the first
birthday, a typical toddler says words,
turns when he hears his name, points
when he wants a toy, and when offered
something distasteful, makes it very
clear that his answer is no. By age
2, most children begin to put together
sentences like "See doggie,"
or "More cookie," and can
follow simple directions.
Research
shows that about half of the children
diagnosed with autism remain mute
throughout their lives. Some infants
who later show signs of autism do
coo and babble during the first 6
months of life. But they soon stop.
Although they may learn to communicate
using sign language or special electronic
equipment, they may never speak. Others
may be delayed, developing language
as late as age 5 to 8.
Those
who do speak often use language in
unusual ways. Some seem unable to
combine words into meaningful sentences.
Some speak only single words. Others
repeat the same phrase no matter what
the situation.
Some
children with autism are only able
to parrot what they hear, a condition
called echolalia. Without persistent
training, echoing other people's phrases
may be the only language that people
with autism ever acquire. What they
repeat might be a question they were
just asked, or an advertisement on
television. Or out of the blue, a
child may shout, "Stay on your
own side of the road!"-something
he heard his father say weeks before.
Although children without autism go
through a stage where they repeat
what they hear, it normally passes
by the time they are 3.
People
with autism also tend to confuse pronouns.
They fail to grasp that words like
"my," "I," and
"you," change meaning depending
on who is speaking. When Alan's teacher
asks, "What is my name?"
he answers, "My name is Alan."
Some
children say the same phrase in a
variety of different situations. One
child, for example, says "Get
in the car," at random times
throughout the day. While on the surface,
her statement seems bizarre, there
may be a meaningful pattern in what
the child says. The child may be saying,
"Get in the car," whenever
she wants to go outdoors. In her own
mind, she's associated "Get in
the car," with leaving the house.
Another child, who says "Milk
and cookies" whenever he is pleased,
may be associating his good feelings
around this treat with other things
that give him pleasure.
It
can be equally difficult to understand
the body language of a person with
autism. Most of us smile when we talk
about things we enjoy, or shrug when
we can't answer a question. But for
children with autism, facial expressions,
movements, and gestures rarely match
what they are saying. Their tone of
voice also fails to reflect their
feelings. A high-pitched, sing-song,
or flat, robot-like voice is common.
Without
meaningful gestures or the language
to ask for things, people with autism
are at a loss to let others know what
they need. As a result, children with
autism may simply scream or grab what
they want. Temple Grandin, an exceptional
woman with autism who has written
two books about her disorder, admits,
"Not being able to speak was
utter frustration. Screaming was the
only way I could communicate."
Often she would logically think to
herself, "I am going to scream
now because I want to tell somebody
I don't want to do something."
Until they are taught better means
of expressing their needs, people
with autism do whatever they can to
get through to others.
The
Story of Temple Grandin
Temple
Grandin, despite a lifelong struggle
with autism, earned a doctoral degree
in animal science. Today, she invents
equipment for managing livestock and
teaches at a major university. A woman
of extraordinary accomplishments,
she has also written several books
on animal science, autism, and her
own life.
Yet
at 6 months old, Temple had many of
the full-blown signs of autism. When
held, she would stiffen and struggle
to be put down. By age 2, it was clear
that she was hypersensitive to taste,
sound, smell, and touch. Sounds were
excruciating. Wearing clothes was
torture: the feel of certain fabrics
was like sandpaper grating her skin.
Constantly buffeted by overpowering
sensations, she screamed, raged, and
threw things. At other times, she
found that by focusing intently and
exclusively on one item-her own hand,
an apple, a spinning coin, or sand
sifting through her fingers-she could
withdraw into a temporary haven of
order and predictability.
As
was customary at the time, a doctor
advised that Temple be institutionalized.
Her mother refused and placed her
in a therapeutic program for children
who were speech impaired. The classes
were small and highly structured.
Even though the program was not designed
to treat autism, the methods worked
for Temple. By age 4, she began to
speak and by age 5 she was able to
attend kindergarten in a regular school.
Temple attributes her success to several
key people in her life: her mother,
who persisted in finding help; her
therapist, who kept her from withdrawing
into an inner world; and a high school
teacher who helped transform her interest
in animals into a career in animal
science.
Temple's
insights into the needs of animals,
a strongly developed ability to think
visually "in pictures,"
and an awareness of her own special
needs led her to invent equipment
that has helped both livestock and,
remarkably, herself. After seeing
a device used to calm cattle, she
created a "squeeze machine."
The machine provides self- controlled
pressure that helps her relax. She
finds that after using the squeeze
machine, she feels less aggressive
and less hypersensitive. With her
love of animals and her personal sensitivity
as a guide, Temple has also designed
humane equipment and facilities for
managing cattle that are used all
over the world. Her unusually strong
visual sense allows her to plan and
design these complex projects in her
head. She can precisely envision new,
complex facilities and how various
pieces of equipment fit together before
she draws a blueprint.
Temple
Grandin's story is a powerful affirmation
that autism need not keep people from
realizing their potential.
Repetitive
behaviors and obsessions
Although
children with autism usually appear
physically normal and have good muscle
control, odd repetitive motions may
set them off from other children.
A child might spend hours repeatedly
flicking or flapping her fingers or
rocking back and forth. Many flail
their arms or walk on their toes.
Some suddenly freeze in position.
Experts call such behaviors stereotypies
or self-stimulation.
Some
people with autism also tend to repeat
certain actions over and over. A child
might spend hours lining up pretzel
sticks. Or, like Alan, run from room
to room turning lights on and off.
Some
children with autism develop troublesome
fixations with specific objects, which
can lead to unhealthy or dangerous
behaviors. For example, one child
insists on carrying feces from the
bathroom into her classroom. Other
behaviors are simply startling, humorous,
or embarrassing to those around them.
One girl, obsessed with digital watches,
grabs the arms of strangers to look
at their wrists.
For
unexplained reasons, people with autism
demand consistency in their environment.
Many insist on eating the same foods,
at the same time, sitting at precisely
the same place at the table every
day. They may get furious if a picture
is tilted on the wall, or wildly upset
if their toothbrush has been moved
even slightly. A minor change in their
routine, like taking a different route
to school, may be tremendously upsetting.
Scientists
are exploring several possible explanations
for such repetitive, obsessive behavior.
Perhaps the order and sameness lends
some stability in a world of sensory
confusion. Perhaps focused behaviors
help them to block out painful stimuli.
Yet another theory is that these behaviors
are linked to the senses that work
well or poorly. A child who sniffs
everything in sight may be using a
stable sense of smell to explore his
environment. Or perhaps the reverse
is true: he may be trying to stimulate
a sense that is dim.
Imaginative
play, too, is limited by these repetitive
behaviors and obsessions. Most children,
as early as age 2, use their imagination
to pretend. They create new uses for
an object, perhaps using a bowl for
a hat. Or they pretend to be someone
else, like a mother cooking dinner
for her "family" of dolls.
In contrast, children with autism
rarely pretend. Rather than rocking
a doll or rolling a toy car, they
may simply hold it, smell it, or spin
it for hours on end.
Sensory
symptoms
When
children's perceptions are accurate,
they can learn from what they see,
feel, or hear. On the other hand,
if sensory information is faulty or
if the input from the various senses
fails to merge into a coherent picture,
the child's experiences of the world
can be confusing. People with autism
seem to have one or both of these
problems. There may be problems in
the sensory signals that reach the
brain or in the integration of the
sensory signals-and quite possibly,
both.
Apparently,
as a result
of a brain malfunction, many children
with autism are highly attuned or
even painfully sensitive to certain
sounds, textures, tastes, and smells.
Some children find the feel of clothes
touching their skin so disturbing
that they can't focus on anything
else. For others, a gentle hug may
be overwhelming. Some children cover
their ears and scream at the sound
of a vacuum cleaner, a distant airplane,
a telephone ring, or even the wind.
Temple Grandin says, "It was
like having a hearing aid that picks
up everything, with the volume control
stuck on super loud." Because
any noise was so painful, she often
chose to withdraw and tuned out sounds
to the point of seeming deaf.
In
autism, the brain also seems unable
to balance the senses appropriately.
Some children with autism seem oblivious
to extreme cold or pain, but react
hysterically to things that wouldn't
bother other children. A child with
autism may break her arm in a fall
and never cry. Another child might
bash his head on the wall without
a wince. On the other hand, a light
touch may make the child scream with
alarm.
In
some people, the senses are even scrambled.
One child gags when she feels a certain
texture. A man with autism hears a
sound when someone touches a point
on his chin. Another experiences certain
sounds as colors.
Unusual
abilities
Some
people with autism display remarkable
abilities. A few demonstrate skills
far out of the ordinary. At a young
age, when other children are drawing
straight lines and scribbling, some
children with autism are able to draw
detailed, realistic pictures in three-dimensional
perspective. Some toddlers who are
autistic are so visually skilled that
they can put complex jigsaw puzzles
together. Many begin to read exceptionally
early-sometimes even before they begin
to speak. Some who have a keenly developed
sense of hearing can play musical
instruments they have never been taught,
play a song accurately after hearing
it once, or name any note they hear.
Like the person played by Dustin Hoffman
in the movie Rain Man, some
people with autism can memorize
entire television shows, pages of
the phone book, or the scores of every
major league baseball game for the
past 20 years. However, such skills,
known as islets of intelligence or
savant skills are rare.
Find
an Autism Lawyer in Any State:
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