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Altered attitudes can open worlds

Steve Silberman, who this week won the Samuel Johnson Prize for his book on autism, explains why he believes the brain disorder has become so prevalent

November 5, 2015 13:24
Mystery: We don't know why autistic children are so distant

By

Steve Silberman

8 min read

A few years ago, after someone mentioned to me about the supposed rise of autism in Silicon Valley, I started reading every news story about autism I could find and downloading journal articles by the score. It soon became clear that the mysterious rise in diagnoses was not restricted to California, where I live. The same thing was happening all over the world.

To put the rising numbers in context, I familiarised myself with the basic time-line of autism history, learning the story of how this baffling condition was first discovered in 1943 by a child psychiatrist named Leo Kanner, who noticed that 11 of his young patients seemed to inhabit private worlds, ignoring the people around them. They could amuse themselves for hours with little rituals like spinning pot lids on the floor, but they were panicked by the smallest changes in their environments, such as a chair or favourite toy being moved from its usual place without their knowledge. Some of these children were unable to speak, while others only repeated things they heard said around them or spoke of themselves detachedly in the third person.

Claiming that their condition differed "markedly and uniquely" from anything previously reported in the clinical literature, Kanner named their condition autism - from autos the Greek word for self - because they seemed happiest in isolation.

A year later, in an apparent synchronicity, a Viennese clinician named Hans Asperger discovered four young patients of his own who seemed strangely out of touch with other people, including their parents. Unlike Kanner's young patients in Baltimore, these children spoke in elaborate flowery sentences while displaying precocious abilities in science and mathematics. Asperger affectionately dubbed them his "little professors".