Autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterised by socio-communicative impairments and restricted interests and repetitive behaviours. While autism is today diagnosed in approximately 1 in 100 children, and retrospectively observed throughout history, it was described for the first time only in the 1940s and seen only rarely until more recently still. Some of the broad social, and specific scientific, developments which led to the contemporary form and shape of autism are here outlined. Social developments include the advent of psychology, the onset of compulsory education, and the widespread deinstitutionalisation which occurred in the 1960s. Consideration of scientific change is centred on the move away from psychoanalytic concepts ...
This review paper traces the evolution of autism since its simultaneous discovery back in the fortie...
This thesis investigates autism as it has been understood in the cognitive and social (neuro)science...
One hundred years after its appearance on the scientific scene, autism finds its place more and more...
Autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterised by socio-communicative impairments and restric...
Autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterised by socio-communicative impairments and restric...
This thesis investigates autism as it has been understood in the cognitive and social (neuro)science...
Discourse related to autism studies are multidisciplinary, applied, and extensive. Pulling from mult...
Autism is a very complicated diagnosis, both with respect to recent discoveries on its functional ge...
Autism is a very complicated diagnosis, both with respect to recent discoveries on its functional ge...
This thesis investigates autism as it has been understood in the cognitive and social (neuro)science...
Abstract This article examines three key aetiological theories of autism (meta-representations, exec...
Twenty academic psychologists and neuroscientists, with an interest in autism and based within the U...
Autism is the most commonly studied of a spectrum of developmental disorders that are believed to be...
Twenty academic psychologists and neuroscientists, with an interest in autism and based within the ...
AbstractTwenty academic psychologists and neuroscientists, with an interest in autism and based with...
This review paper traces the evolution of autism since its simultaneous discovery back in the fortie...
This thesis investigates autism as it has been understood in the cognitive and social (neuro)science...
One hundred years after its appearance on the scientific scene, autism finds its place more and more...
Autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterised by socio-communicative impairments and restric...
Autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterised by socio-communicative impairments and restric...
This thesis investigates autism as it has been understood in the cognitive and social (neuro)science...
Discourse related to autism studies are multidisciplinary, applied, and extensive. Pulling from mult...
Autism is a very complicated diagnosis, both with respect to recent discoveries on its functional ge...
Autism is a very complicated diagnosis, both with respect to recent discoveries on its functional ge...
This thesis investigates autism as it has been understood in the cognitive and social (neuro)science...
Abstract This article examines three key aetiological theories of autism (meta-representations, exec...
Twenty academic psychologists and neuroscientists, with an interest in autism and based within the U...
Autism is the most commonly studied of a spectrum of developmental disorders that are believed to be...
Twenty academic psychologists and neuroscientists, with an interest in autism and based within the ...
AbstractTwenty academic psychologists and neuroscientists, with an interest in autism and based with...
This review paper traces the evolution of autism since its simultaneous discovery back in the fortie...
This thesis investigates autism as it has been understood in the cognitive and social (neuro)science...
One hundred years after its appearance on the scientific scene, autism finds its place more and more...