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They must see the world differently, how does it look through their eyes? People who have, Aspergers, answers are especially appreciated...

2007-03-14 12:47:38 · 4 answers · asked by tunafish 2 in Social Science Psychology

4 answers

This is a very complex question, and one that is not easily answered. I have not been diagnosed with asperger's syndrome, but I do have many asperger's tendencies, and I have come into contact with quite a few people who have asperger's.

In general, people with asperger's syndrome have trouble with social conventions and understanding the unwritten rules of social interaction. For instance, they often have difficulty reading other people's facial expressions and body language. Social rules that most people comply to without ever thinking about can be very confusing to people with asperger's syndrome, and they often have difficulty processing and dealing with emotions. This inability to grasp social conventions can create frustration and a feeling that everyone else is in on a secret that you are missing out on. Verbal communication is often difficult for individuals with asperger's syndrome, and they may find it easier to communicate through creative expression such as painting or music. Of course it is difficult for a person with asperger's (or asperger's tendencies) to explain how their perceptions are different from the rest of the world because they don't always understand the way that others see things, and therefore don't realize what the differences are.

An excellent resource on this topic is the book "Thinking in Pictures" by Temple Grandin. She describes her own personal experience living with asperger's syndrome and speaks in depth about the way her mind works differently. There are also several other books by Temple Grandin that would be worth looking into.

2007-03-14 13:28:44 · answer #1 · answered by Katherine J 2 · 2 0

It does sound like Asperger's, and in spite of if this is you extremely have no longer something to fret approximately. by ability of your articulacy and self- information, you're very severe functioning. Your description of your Mum lacking people's boredom together with her communication and your individual problems with communication are surely Asperger's characteristics, as are your want for habitual. Your ability to concentration on drawing are indicative of Asperger's, this is why this type of great style of engineers and scientists have Aspergers. many those with Asperger's have a greater physically powerful IQ than the final inhabitants, too, which i think is right down to that dazzling concentration. loss of something to concentration on and feed your ideas possibly in charge to your rigidity and restlessness. Clumsiness isn't an Asperger's trait: I also have a chum who has Asperger's. he's very severe functioning and has the grace of a cat. merely don't get him speaking approximately snakes except you're definitely fascinated, like me. he's ferociously stunning too. I paintings with a guy who has low functioning Autism, yet he's extremely swish. Asperger's isn't something to fret approximately. you are able to study the social cues from others and that i'm specific you already are. maximum folk have many Asperger's characteristics besides. the web exams i've got taken have me so close to to Asperger's spectrum it replaced into enlightening: it defined why I chosen to paintings with people on the Autism Spectrum: i'm getting them and that they get me.

2016-12-14 19:17:51 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Asperger's Disorder is a milder variant of Autistic Disorder. Both Asperger's Disorder and Autistic Disorder are in fact subgroups of a larger diagnostic category. This larger category is called either Autistic Spectrum Disorders, mostly in European countries, or Pervasive Developmental Disorders ("PDD"), in the United States.

In Asperger's Disorder, affected individuals are characterized by social isolation and eccentric behavior in childhood. There are impairments in two-sided social interaction and non-verbal communication. Though grammatical, their speech is peculiar due to abnormalities of inflection and a repetitive pattern. Clumsiness is prominent both in their articulation and gross motor behavior. They usually have a circumscribed area of interest which usually leaves no space for more age appropriate, common interests. Some examples are cars, trains, French Literature, door knobs, hinges, cappucino, meteorology, astronomy or history.

2007-03-14 12:56:21 · answer #3 · answered by llosier9 3 · 1 0

I been told I am very slightly Asberger's (not a problem and not diagnosed)

I would stylise it as not filtering out as much irrelevant detail as others might do. For me it helps me to be a lateral thinker and to spot solutions to problems and situations that others might miss.

For more pronounced cases, there could be too much concentration on detail, making communication and contact with other people more problematic, because they don't see it for what it is.

in extreme cases, you are talking more about autism .. where the distraction by detail impairs perception of the big picture, and understanding that there really are other poeple out there, and empathising with them.

2007-03-14 12:58:13 · answer #4 · answered by hustolemyname 6 · 1 1

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