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Yes. High Funtioning means that he is just a little affected by the syndrome. Symptoms are likely very mild. You may notice when you get to know the person more closely, but it is possible that for just a quick conversation the person appears completely normal.

2006-07-13 05:48:09 · answer #1 · answered by ? 4 · 0 1

Yes, Bill Gates has Aspergers Syndrome. This is just another form of high functioning Autism. My son has Autism and you can tell when you meet him. The Autisic scale is huge. From completely inverted to people like ole rich Bill.

2006-07-13 05:48:18 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Absolutely. We have a 15 yr.old who looks and acts like everyone else until your'e around her for a while. She reads and writes at college level, can draw whatever she sees down to the tiniest detail and has an incrediblesinging voice. She reads a story or sees a movie once or twice and can act it out and reapeat dialogue nearly verbatim. However she is unable to to understand or remember math facts beyond 2 or 3 grade, tie shoes or button and has trouble with zippers. She has no social consiousness and the public school system doesn't know what to do with her. I think that these kids should be taught according to what they obsess about. I just love her and don't let "authority" run over her. You know your kid better than anyone else.

2006-07-14 16:22:01 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Albert Einstein did not talk till the age of four and did not study the thanks to study till age 9. he's known to have had some sort of incapacity, and look what he did including his existence. there's a lot confusion between asperger's and autism because they have many of the same characteristics. the indicators could also replace slightly as someone grows and matures and the mind develops. So that is achievable that your prognosis isn't precisely acceptable. i'd not hardship about the precise label a lot on the grounds that they're appropriate. extremely, make efficient you recognize what you want help with and the thanks to get that help for you to change right into a effective learner. in case you get to carry close your own strengths and weaknesses, your label received't settle on who you change into in existence. strong success.

2016-11-06 07:59:30 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It's certainly possible. As children with this and similar types of syndromes get older, they learn to adhere to social norms, although technically, inside, they are still different. It's the same with PDD-NOS. They learn to appear normal, though their emotional response probably never will be.

2006-07-13 05:48:06 · answer #5 · answered by dark_storm73 3 · 0 0

noooooooo
sorry to be ravishing rick rude but i've met kids w/ aspergers and the moment you meet them you know somethings not right. putting them in normal classes in school only makes the situation worse. maybe there's a few here and there....

2006-07-13 06:00:22 · answer #6 · answered by I am cool 1 · 0 0

I believe it is possible. Some people with Aspergergs can seem normal in every situation but they have a weakness in one specific situation, and sometimes people can't even put their finger on what that eccentricity is.

2006-07-13 05:47:45 · answer #7 · answered by Lilel 4 · 0 0

There's another one of those fake, made up diseases!
"high functioning Aspergers Syndrome" my butt!

2006-07-13 05:49:11 · answer #8 · answered by Pobept 6 · 0 3

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