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Symptoms and Common Characteristics of Autism
(As taken with permission from the Autism Society of America)
While understanding of autism has grown tremendously since it was
first described by Dr. Leo Kanner in 1943, most of the public,
including many professionals in the medical, educational, and
vocational fields, are still unaware of how autism affects people and
how they can effectively work with individuals with autism. Contrary
to popular understanding, many children and adults with autism may
make eye contact, show affection, smile and laugh, and demonstrate a
variety of other emotions, although in varying degrees. Like other
children, they respond to their environment in both positive and
negative ways.
Autism is a spectrum disorder. The symptoms and characteristics of
autism can present themselves in a wide variety of combinations,
from mild to severe. Although autism is defined by a certain set of
behaviors, children and adults can exhibit any combination of the
behaviors in any degree of severity. Two children, both with the same
diagnosis, can act very differently from one another and have varying
skills.
Parents may hear different terms used to describe children within
this spectrum, such as autistic-like, autistic tendencies, autism
spectrum, high-functioning or low-functioning autism, more-abled or
less-abled. More important than the term used is to understand that,
whatever the diagnosis, children with autism can learn and function
productively and show gains with appropriate education and treatment.
Every person with autism is an individual, and like all individuals,
has a unique personality and combination of characteristics. Some
individuals mildly affected may exhibit only slight delays in language
and greater challenges with social interactions. The person may have
difficulty initiating and/or maintaining a conversation.
Communication is often described as talking at others (for example,
monologue on a favorite subject that continues despite attempts by
others to interject comments).
People with autism process and respond to information in unique ways.
In some cases, aggressive and/or self-injurious behavior may be
present. Persons with autism may also exhibit some of the following
traits.
- Insistence on sameness; resistance to change
- Difficulty in expressing needs; uses gestures or pointing instead of words
- Repeating words or phrases in place of normal, responsive language
- Laughing, crying, showing distress for reasons not apparent to others
- Prefers to be alone; aloof manner
- Tantrums
- Difficulty in mixing with others
- May not want to cuddle or be cuddled
- Little or no eye contact
- Unresponsive to normal teaching methods
- Sustained odd play
- Spins objects
- Inappropriate attachments to objects
- Apparent over-sensitivity or under-sensitivity to pain
- No real fears of danger
- Noticeable physical over-activity or extreme under-activity
- Uneven gross/fine motor skills
- Not responsive to verbal cues; acts as if deaf although hearing tests in normal range.
For most of us, the integration of our senses helps us to understand
what we are experiencing. For example, our senses of touch, smell and
taste work together in the experience of eating a ripe peach: the feel
of the peach fuzz as we pick it up, its sweet smell as we bring it to
our mouth, and the juices running down our face as we take a bite. For
children with autism, sensory integration problems are common. Their
senses may be over-or under-active. The fuzz on the peach may actually
be experienced as painful; the smell may make the child gag. Some
children with autism are particularly sensitive to sound, finding even
the most ordinary daily noises painful. Many professionals feel that
some of the typical autism behaviors are actually a result of sensory
integration difficulties.
There are many myths and misconceptions about autism. Contrary to
popular belief, many autistic children do make eye contact; it just may
be less or different from a non-autistic child. Many children with
autism can develop good functional language and others can develop
some type of communication skills, such as sign language or use of
pictures. Children do not "outgrow" autism but symptoms may lessen as
the child develops and receives treatment.
One of the most devastating myths about autistic children is that they
cannot show affection. While sensory stimulation is processed
differently in some children with autism, they can and do give
affection. But it may require patience on a parent's part to accept
and give love in the child's terms.
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