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As the number of children with autism increases, so do the number of books to help them.
By Michael Hanlon
The autism epidemic seen in most Western countries in the past 30 years is one of the great medical mysteries of our time.
The cause cannot be some great genetic shift – there simply hasn’t been enough time for this to have happened.
Diets are not hugely different and there is nothing to suggest any other aspect of lifestyles might be to blame.
One rather bizarre hypothesis, that certain combinations of vaccines given to toddlers might be to blame, has now been thoroughly discredited.
One “explanation” is certainly over-diagnosis; 50 years ago “autism” was quite narrowly defined, a serious mental impairment which normally prevented sufferers taking a place in mainstream society. Now children who are simply a bit obsessive or who show signs of social dysfunction are routinely labelled “autistic spectrum” or “Asperger syndrome”.
But over-diagnosis cannot explain all the rise.
For some years now Professor Simon Baron-Cohen (cousin of the comedian and actor Sacha), a psychologist at Cambridge University, has been developing his theory that something called “assortative mating” may be at least partly to blame for the spectacular rise in autism diagnoses.
The theory states that when people with strongly “systemising” personalities – the sort of people who become engineers, surgeons, computer experts and who shine in some aspects of business – marry each other and produce children, the effects of this kind of “male brain” are genetically magnified, increasing the chances of producing an autistic child – a child with what Baron-Cohen suspects is an “extreme male brain”.
Strong “systemisers” are often slightly obsessive, perfectionist and make great scientists and are often extremely talented at music. But they sometimes have difficulties socially interacting with other people – a combination of traits that can blend into the milder end of the autism spectrum.
Cambridge University’s Autism Research Centre is now asking members of the public who are graduates and parents to take part in a survey which will investigate any links between educational achievement, what kind of job they have and how their children develop.
Specifically, the new study will try to find out whether two “strong systemisers” do indeed have a higher chance of producing autistic children.
Baron-Cohen’s theory is certainly plausible.
Some of the sharpest increases in autism diagnoses have been found in Silicon Valley, in California – home to perhaps the largest population of successful systemisers on Earth, the tens of thousands of technicians, engineers and programmers who work in the computer industry. Inevitably, many of these people marry each other (there are now plenty of women working in IT, not the case a generation ago) and this is good – although circumstantial – evidence of the systemising-autism link.
But what about other places? Why the rise in autism just about everywhere? One answer could be the changing role of women in general seen in the past 100 years.
Until relatively recently, being exceptionally bright was not much use to you if you were female. The opportunities for a woman to earn her living through brainpower alone were extremely limited.
Going to university was difficult and expensive – most did not even allow girls to study. There were certainly few opportunities for careers in engineering or the sciences.
You could become a teacher or maybe, if you were exceptionally talented, earn your living writing or in the arts. Most of the professions were closed, as was the world of business.
Brainy women were not even seen as particularly desirable partners. Clever or rich men chose brides on the grounds of looks, “breeding” or both.
Having an IQ in the 140s probably counted against you, if anything. The traditional image of a “dumb blonde” hanging off the arm of the successful politician or businessman was a horrible cliché but it had an element of truth.
And in any case, very clever women would have often been mad to get married.
If she did have a job, many employers would automatically fire a woman the moment she turned up with an engagement ring. So many clever, “systemising” women simply did not marry, or married late – and probably had fewer children when they did.
Now everything has changed. Not only have the legal and social barriers to women entering the workplace as equals been largely dismantled, we also have the phenomenon of the desirable “alpha female”.
Fifty years ago many men were scared of smart women. Now, increasingly, alpha males want someone their equal or even superior. Fifty years ago, male airline pilots typically married stewardesses; now they marry other pilots. Doctors used to marry nurses; now they marry other doctors.
The wives of successful politicians are, increasingly, successful in their own right – and of course many successful politicians are women.
Baron-Cohen points out that “alpha females” are not necessarily strong systemisers.
Being a brilliant politician or writer may not require the sort of geeky “male brain” that may lie behind the autism rise.
But the phenomenon of like marrying like may be having completely unexpected consequences that go far beyond mere equal opportunities for women.
It is a fascinating theory and we await the results of the new study with interest. – Daily Mail
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Anonymous, wrote
How can your theory be that working mothers are the ones that produce children with autism... I am a mother with an autistic child, and think your theory is miles away from reality. Why do I have 2 other children that are perfectly normal, why are they not autistic then?
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