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Grandin Temple - The Autistic Brain: Thinking Across the Spectrum

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Grandin Temple The Autistic Brain: Thinking Across the Spectrum
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A cutting-edge account of the latest science of autism, from the best-selling author and advocate When Temple Grandin was born in 1947, autism had only just been named. Today it is more prevalent than ever, with one in 88 children diagnosed on the spectrum. And our thinking about it has undergone a transformation in her lifetime: Autism studies have moved from the realm of psychology to neurology and genetics, and there is far more hope today than ever before thanks to groundbreaking new research into causes and?treatments. Now Temple Grandin reports from the forefront of autism science, bringing her singular perspective to a thrilling journey into the heart of the autism revolution. Weaving her own experience with remarkable new discoveries, Grandin introduces the neuroimaging advances and genetic research that link brain science to behavior, even sharing her own brain scan to show us which anomalies might explain common symptoms. We meet the scientists and self-advocates who are exploring innovative theories of what causes autism and how we can diagnose and best treat it. Grandin also highlights long-ignored sensory problems and the transformative effects we can have by treating autism symptom by symptom, rather than with an umbrella diagnosis. Most exciting, she argues that raising and educating kids on the spectrum isn?t just a matter of focusing on their weaknesses; in the science that reveals their long-overlooked strengths she shows us new ways to foster their unique contributions. From the aspies in Silicon Valley to the five-year-old without language, Grandin understands the true meaning of the word spectrum is essential reading from the most respected and beloved voices in the field.

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Table of Contents First Mariner Books edition 2014 Copyright 2013 by Temple - photo 1

Table of Contents

First Mariner Books edition 2014

Copyright 2013 by Temple Grandin and Richard Panek

All rights reserved

For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.

www.hmhco.com

THIS BOOK PRESENTS THE RESEARCH AND IDEAS OF ITS AUTHORS. IT IS NOT INTENDED TO BE A SUBSTITUTE FOR CONSULTATION WITH A PROFESSIONAL CLINICIAN. THE PUBLISHER AND THE AUTHORS DISCLAIM RESPONSIBILITY FOR ANY ADVERSE EFFECTS RESULTING DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY FROM INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS BOOK.

The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:

Grandin, Temple.

The autistic brain : thinking across the spectrum / Temple Grandin and Richard Panek.

pages cm

ISBN 978-0-547-63645-0 (hardback) ISBN 978-0-544-22773-6 (pbk.)

1. Autism spectrum disorders. 2. Autistic peopleMental health. 3. AutismResearch. 4. Psychology, Pathological. I. Panek, Richard. II. Title.

RC 553. A 88 G 725 2013

616.85'882dc23 2013000662

e ISBN 978-0-547-85818-0
v2.0314

Prologue

IN THIS BOOK I will be your guide on a tour of the autistic brain. I am in the unique position to speak about both my experiences with autism and the insights I have gained from undergoing numerous brain scans over the decades, always with the latest technology. In the late 1980s, shortly after MRI became available, I jumped at the opportunity to travel on my first journey to the center of my brain. MRI machines were rarities in those days, and seeing the detailed anatomy of my brain was awesome. Since then, every time a new scanning method becomes available, I am the first in line to try it out. My many brain scans have provided possible explanations for my childhood speech delay, panic attacks, and facial-recognition difficulties.

Autism and other developmental disorders still have to be diagnosed with a clumsy system of behavioral profiling provided in a book called the DSM, which is short for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Unlike a diagnosis for strep throat, the diagnostic criteria for autism have changed with each new edition of the DSM. I warn parents, teachers, and therapists to avoid getting locked into the labels. They are not precise. I beg you: Do not allow a child or an adult to become defined by a DSM label.

The genetics of autism is an exceedingly complex quagmire. Many small variations in the genetic code that control brain development are involved. A genetic variation that is found in one autistic child will be absent in another autistic child. I will review the latest in genetics.

Researchers have done hundreds of studies on autistics problems with social communication and facial recognition, but they have neglected sensory issues. Sensory oversensitivity is totally debilitating for some people and mild in others. Sensory problems may make it impossible for some individuals on the autism spectrum to participate in normal family activities, much less get jobs. This is why my top priorities for autism research are accurate diagnoses and improved treatments for sensory problems.

Autism, depression, and other disorders are on a continuum ranging from normal to abnormal. Too much of a trait causes severe disability, but a little bit can provide an advantage. If all genetic brain disorders were eliminated, people might be happier, but there would be a terrible price.

When I wrote Thinking in Pictures, in 1995, I mistakenly thought that everybody on the autism spectrum was a photorealistic visual thinker like me. When I started interviewing other people about how they recalled information, I realized I was wrong. I theorized that there were three types of specialized thinking, and I was ecstatic when I found several research studies that verified my thesis. Understanding what kind of thinker you are can help you respect your limitations and, just as important, take advantage of your strengths.

The landscape I was born into sixty-five years ago was a very different place from where we are now. Weve gone from institutionalizing children with severe autism to trying to provide them with the most fulfilling lives possibleand, as you will read in chapter 8, finding meaningful work for those who are able. This book will show you every step of my journey.

TG

Part I

THE AUTISTIC BRAIN
The Meanings of Autism

I WAS FORTUNATE to have been born in 1947. If I had been born ten years later, my life as a person with autism would have been a lot different. In 1947, the diagnosis of autism was only four years old. Almost nobody knew what it meant. When Mother noticed in me the symptoms that we would now label autisticdestructive behavior, inability to speak, a sensitivity to physical contact, a fixation on spinning objects, and so onshe did what made sense to her. She took me to a neurologist.

Bronson Crothers had served as the director of the neurology service at Boston Childrens Hospital since its founding, in 1920. The first thing Dr. Crothers did in my case was administer an electroencephalogram, or EEG, to make sure I didnt have petit mal epilepsy. Then he tested my hearing to make sure I wasnt deaf. Well, she certainly is an odd little girl, he told Mother. Then when I began to verbalize a little, Dr. Crothers modified his evaluation: Shes an odd little girl, but shell learn how to talk. The diagnosis: brain damage.

He referred us to a speech therapist who ran a small school in the basement of her house. I suppose you could say the other kids there were brain damaged too; they suffered from Down syndrome and other disorders. Even though I was not deaf, I had difficulty hearing consonants, such as the c in cup. When grownups talked fast, I heard only the vowel sounds, so I thought they had their own special language. But by speaking slowly, the speech therapist helped me to hear the hard consonant sounds, and when I said cup with a c, she praised mewhich is just what a behavioral therapist would do today.

At the same time, Mother hired a nanny who played constant turn-taking games with my sister and me. The nannys approach was also similar to the one that behavioral therapists use today. She made sure that every game the three of us played was a turn-taking game. During meals, I was taught table manners, and I was not allowed to twirl my fork around over my head. The only time I could revert back to autism was for one hour after lunch. The rest of the day, I had to live in a nonrocking, nontwirling world.

Mother did heroic work. In fact, she discovered on her own the standard treatment that therapists use today. Therapists might disagree about the benefits of a particular aspect of this therapy versus a particular aspect of that therapy. But the core principle of every programincluding the one that was used with me, Miss Reynoldss Basement Speech-Therapy School Plus Nannyis to engage with the kid one-on-one for hours every day, twenty to forty hours per week.

The work Mother did, however, was based on the initial diagnosis of brain damage. Just a decade later, a doctor would probably have reached a completely different diagnosis. After examining me, the doctor would have told Mother, Its a psychological problemits all in her mind. And then sent me to an institution.

While Ive written extensively about autism, Ive never really written about how the diagnosis itself is reached. Unlike meningitis or lung cancer or strep throat, autism cant be diagnosed in the laboratorythough researchers are trying to develop methods to do so, as well see later in this book. Instead, as with many psychiatric syndromes, such as depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder, autism is identified by observing and evaluating behaviors. Those observations and evaluations are subjective, and the behaviors vary from person to person. The diagnosis can be confusing, and it can be vague. It has changed over the years, and it continues to change.

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