|
|
|
|
|
by bitwize
1795 days ago
|
|
There's a bit of nomenclatural history here. There was autism, which usually manifested as a severe disorder that significantly impaired functioning. People with a social deficit like autism, but who were otherwise fine, were usually diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, which was considered like autism but not quite autism. Then there was high-functioning autism, which wasn't the same as Asperger's syndrome, a major distinguishing characteristic being that people with HFA had a speech deficit in early childhood while people with AS did not. That was where things stood as of the DSM IV. Then the DSM V came along and lumped all of the above into a single classification of "autism spectrum disorder". |
|