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Asperger's Symptoms and Signs

Developmental Delays and High Functioning Autism

© Michael McGrath

Jun 7, 2008
Provides an overview of Asperger's symptoms, including developmental delays in language development, motor skills, and sensory integration.

Asperger’s syndrome, also known as Asperger’s disorder or high functioning disorder, is one of the milder pervasive developmental disorders (PDDs) on the autism spectrum. While Asperger’s disorder is closer to “normal” than other PDDs, any symptom of Asperger’s syndrome can range in severity from one person to the next. Asperger’s symptoms affect social behavior, language, and behavior.

Symptoms of Asperger’s syndrome resemble high functioning autism, and some autism / Asperger’s specialists believe the two PDDs are actually a single condition. Others believe there are subtle differences between Asperger’s and high functioning autism.

Asperger’s Disorder and Restricted Interests

An obsession or fascination with a particular topic is a hallmark symptom of Asperger’s syndrome. Both Asperger’s children and adults develop intense interest in restricted subjects and can talk, often for hours, about their interest.

Some Asperger’s children develop interests that last throughout their lifetime, and often determine their careers. A child who obsesses on weather patterns, for instance, may mature into an adult who works as a meteorologist. Other children with Asperger’s go through a series of interests, but the intensity of their current interest, and the exclusion of all other interests, is similar to those who focus on one interest..

Given half a chance, a child with Asperger’s will talk incessantly about his topic of interest. Aspie children are often described as “little professors” by adults, although their one-sided conversation is often a litany of disjointed facts.

Impairments in social development make it difficult for someone with Asperger’s to judge when a listener becomes bored or frustrated with their endless wealth of information about clouds, train numbers, dinosaurs, or other computer spreadsheets.

Asperger’s Symptoms and Social Impairments

Asperger’s symptoms result from developmental delays and impairment in social skills, communication and behavior. An Asperger’s diagnosis requires observable impairment in all three developmental areas. Asperger’s social impairment symptoms include:

  • avoidance of eye contact
  • difficulty making and maintaining friends
  • difficulty understanding turn taking and sharing
  • difficulty understanding / identifying emotions
  • egocentric conversations (conversations center on themselves)
  • impaired interactive play
  • narrow, restricted interests
  • socially inappropriate behavior.

Communication and Language Development

Like autism, Asperger’s symptoms can include developmental delays in language. Often, however, Asperger’s children don’t have developmental delays in language development. In fact, they often have large and complex vocabularies for their age.

Instead of delaying language development, Asperger’s impairs the subtleties of social communication. Asperger’s children have difficulty understanding nuances such as irony, sarcasm and fanciful or metaphoric language. Many Aspie kids take language literally. Expressions like “like watching paint dry,” or “smart as a tack” leave Aspie kids very confused.

Asperger’s speech patterns often seem odd to people who don’t know them. Tone, intonation and volume are often restricted, seemingly inappropriate, or at appear at odds with what is being said.

People with Asperger’s also have difficulty interpreting and displaying non-verbal communication. Facial expressions, body language, gestures and postures are often mysteries to Aspie kids, as is personal space. This inability to instinctively comprehend unspoken communication has led some experts to suggest Asperger’s syndrome is actually a non verbal communication disorder.

Motor Skills and Sensory Integration Symptoms

Asperger’s kids often appear clumsy or klutzy due to developmental delays in motor skills. Catching balls, learning to ride a bike and other childhood skills can be difficult to master. In school, problems with motor skills often manifests as terrible, almost illegible handwriting—a common problem for Aspies.

Asperger’s kids can also have sensory integration problems. Certain sounds, smells or physical sensations may be unbearable, even though “normal” people cannot detect them. A light touch may feel painful to an Asperger’s child, or he may develop “stims,” physical activities designed to stimulate the senses. Spinning is a common “stim” in Aspie kids, who may spin in circles long after other people would get dizzy.

Some Asperger’s kids experience a rare sensory integration condition called synesthesia, where the senses are very different from normal. A person with synesthesia may “see” music, “hear” colors, or other unusual combinations of the senses.

Disclaimer: The information contained within this article is for informational purposes only, and is not intended to be a substitute in any way for care and treatment by a qualified health professional.

Resources

Autism Society of America. What’s Unique about Asperger’s Disorder?

O.A.S.I.S. (n.d). Online Asperger Syndrome Information and Support.


The copyright of the article Asperger's Symptoms and Signs in Autism/Asperger's Syndrome is owned by Michael McGrath. Permission to republish Asperger's Symptoms and Signs in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.




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Comments
Oct 23, 2008 1:16 AM
Guest :
well i have trouble making eyecontact and i do repetious behaviour and engage in steriotyped behaviour such as rocking. and dont like change at all and have a sensory problem to bright light and touch so i think i do have aspergers?
Jan 20, 2009 4:27 PM
Guest :
Evidence and proof are extremely complex subjects. Only someone with deep systematic knowledge and careful judgement would be able to provide you a credible name for your state. The consequences of an incorrect self-diagnosis or amateur diagnosis can in itself create as much difficulty as whatever condition you may have (including none!).

So if you are not yet about to see a medical professional, perhaps you can while away the hours watching youtubes of persons you think may have a similar condition as yours. You might experience a kind of synthetic or organic recognition. But even that may be wrong, since the mind will often push for a bias, e.g. you may perhaps WANT to be an Aspie and filter the evidence accordingly.

Good Luck! For the truth shall set you free! or, as free as you possibly can be anyway.

Sincerely,

Marc Louis Hébert
(Self-diagnosed Aspie)
Feb 2, 2009 2:52 PM
Guest :
I have a sister-in-law who has several of the systems that I have been reading about. She lives with us and was diagnosed as a young person to have "Social Anxiety Disorder". I have lived with her this last year and see a lot of the characteristics, I work with children and had told my husband that I thought she may have high functioning Autism rather than the Social disorder. What do you suggest we do to help her she is 47 and it seems the symptoms are increasing, or becoming more intense. Thank you
3 Comments