ASD - Description Flashcards

1
Q

What is ASD?

A

A lifelong, developmental (symptoms are not noticeable at birth) learning difficulty which is often diagnosed in childhood

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2
Q

How is ASD diagnosed?

A

By identifying deficits - obstacles to normal behavioural, cognitive and emotional functioning

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3
Q

What DSM-5?
Categories?

A

The diagnosis system for autism
2 categories of symptoms:
1. Communication issues
2. Repetitive behaviours

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4
Q

What are communication issues?

A

Social emotional reciprocity - people with ASD often struggle with the normal flow of a conversation. They often won’t initiate conversation and are less likely to respons to others attempts
Non-verbal communication - limited use of eye contact and ‘social smiling’. Can also have issues with proximity and may stand much too close to others
Developing and maintaining social relationships - often unable to empathise with others and struggle to understand social cues such as facial expressions so don’t modify their behaviour.

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5
Q

What are repetitive behaviours?

A

Echolalia - repeating what others say
“Little professor syndrome” - language may be overly formal, precise and complex
Desire for routine - anxiety when changed occur to expected routine

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6
Q

What does DSM-5 distinguish?

A

ASD diagnoses by severity along a spectrum:
Level 1 - requires support to help with social functioning
Level 2 - requires substantial support
Level 3 - required very substantial support
Doesn’t include aspergers syndrome

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