Understanding Autism 
 
     More kids than ever 
 
     are facing the 
 
     challenge of 
 
     雖indblindness.?The 
 
     causes are still a 
 
     mystery, but research 
 
     is offering new clues 
 
     to how the brain 
 
     works. 
 
 
 
     Mysterious Combination: autistic 
 
     tendencies in twins may shed 
 
     light on autism's causes 
 
                         By Geoffrey Cowley 
 
                         NEWSWEEK 
 
 
 
                                 HE TOOK UP screaming instead of sleeping at night, 
 
                         and almost any sensory stimulation, even the touch of clothing 
 
                         against his skin, seemed to upset him. Russell抯 mother, 
 
                         Janna, remembers carrying him upstairs for a bath one night 
 
                         when he was 20 months old. When she called him her baby 
 
                         boy, he said, 揑 not a baby桰 a big boy!?It was the last full 
 
                         sentence he ever spoke. 
 
                                In the years since, Janna and her husband, Rik, have 
 
                         tried everything short of witchcraft to get their child back. 
 
                         Russell follows a special diet and takes dozens of 
 
                         supplements each day. He抯 had speech therapy and 
 
                         behavioral therapy and made his way into special-ed classes 
 
                         at a local elementary school. His parents are thrilled by his 
 
                         progress棓Any little improvement is a victory,?Janna says. 
 
                         But drop in as Russell gets home from school, and you see 
 
                         what the family is up against. Pushing the door open, he flaps 
 
                         his arms and makes a guttural sound before accepting a hug 
 
                         from each parent. He doesn抰 seem to notice the stranger in 
 
                         the room until his mom urges him to say hello. He honors the 
 
                         request, yet his clear blue eyes reveal no hint of engagement. 
 
                         揌e tests in the normal range for intelligence,?his dad says. 
 
                         揃ut he can抰 tell me how his day was, or what hurts.? 
     Any little 
 
     improvement is a 
 
     victory,? 
     ?JANNA 
 
                                People like Russell are not as rare as you抎 think. 
 
                         Autism stalks every sector of society, and its recognized 
 
                         incidence is exploding. In California, the number of kids 
 
                         receiving state services for autistic disorders has nearly 
 
                         quadrupled since 1987, rising 15 percent in the past three 
 
                         months alone. Nationally, the demand for such services rose 
 
                         by 556 percent during the ?0s. Some experts see a 
 
                         growing epidemic in these numbers, while others believe 
 
                         they reflect new awareness of an existing problem. Either 
 
                         way, autism is now thought to affect one person in 500, 
 
                         making it more common than Down syndrome or childhood 
 
                         cancer. 揟his is not a rare disorder,?says Dr. Marie Bristol 
 
                         Power of the National Institute of Child Health and Human 
 
                         Development (NICHD). 揑t抯 a pressing public-health 
 
                         problem.? 
     This is not a rare 
 
     disorder,?says Dr. 
 
     Marie Bristol 
 
     Power of the 
 
     National Institute 
 
     of Child Health 
 
     and Human 
 
     Development 
 
     (NICHD). 揑t抯 a 
 
     pressing 
 
     public-health 
 
     problem.? 
 
 
                                 And a profound mystery. Nearly six decades after 
 
                         autism was first formally recognized, the big 
 
                         questions梂hat causes it? Can it be prevented or 
 
                         cured?梐re still wide open. But the pace of discovery is 
 
                         accelerating. Scientists are gaining tantalizing insights into the 
 
                         autistic mind, with its odd capacity for genius as well as 
 
                         detachment. And though the suspected causes range from 
 
                         genetic mutations to viruses and toxic chemicals, we now 
 
                         know it抯 a brain-based developmental disorder and not a 
 
                         result of poor parenting (accepted wisdom as recently as 
 
                         the 1970s). The condition may never be eradicated, but 
 
                         science is making autistic life more livable, and enriching our 
 
                         whole understanding of the mind. 
 
                                 Until fairly recently, neuroscientists thought of autism 
 
                         as a single, utterly debilitating condition. Like Russell, 
 
                         people with the classic form of the condition lack normal 
 
                         language ability, and they seem devoid of social impulses. A 
 
                         classically autistic child may tug on someone抯 arm to get a 
 
                         need met, but he (four out of five sufferers are male) won抰 
 
                         spontaneously play peekaboo or share his delight in a toy. 
 
                         Nor will he engage in pretend play, using a banana, say, as 
 
                         a pistol or a telephone. What he will do is fixate on a pet 
 
                         interest梔oorknobs, for instance, or license plates梐nd 
 
                         resist any change in routine. A new route to the grocery 
 
                         store can spark a major tantrum. Three out of four 
 
                         classically autistic people are thought to be mentally 
 
                         retarded. A third suffer from epilepsy, and most end up in 
 
                         institutions by the age of 13. 揑t抯 like 慣he Village of the 
 
                         Damned??says Portia Iverson, cofounder of the activist 
 
                         group Cure Autism Now and mother of an autistic 
 
                         8-year-old named Dov. 揑t抯 as if someone has stolen into 
 
                         your house during the night and left your child抯 bewildered 
 
                         body behind.? 
                                 As it turns out, though, autism has more than one face. 
 
                         During the 1940s, a Viennese pediatrician named Hans 
 
                         Asperger described a series of young patients who were 
 
                         somewhat autistic but still capable of functioning at a fairly 
 
                         high level. 
 
 
 
 
 
                         Advice for Parents 
 
                            Autism is a lifelong condition, but early action 
 
                            can make it less devastating 
 
                          ? 
                            Get a diagnosis. If you're concerned, see a doctor 
 
                            who's familiar with autism. Don't assume the child will 
 
                            catch up. 
 
                          ? 
                            Get help. Special schooling and speech therapy are 
 
                            often critical. 
 
                          ? 
                            Know your rights. The government mandates services. 
 
                            
Consult the National Information Center for Children 
 
                            and Youth With Disabilities (nichcy.org/index.html). 
 
                          ? 
                            Seek support. Resources include the National Alliance 
 
                            for Autism Research (naar.org), the Autism Society of 
 
                            America (autism-society.org), Autism Resources 
 
                            (autism-info.com) and Families for the Early Treatment 
 
                            ofAutism (feat.org). 
 
 
 
 
 
                         Newsweek 
 
 
 
                         These 搇ittle professors?had quick tongues and sharp 
 
                         minds. They might stand too close and speak in loud 
 
                         monotones, but they could hold forth eloquently on their pet 
 
                         interests. Asperger抯 work went unread in the 
 
                         English-speaking world for several decades, but its 
 
                         rediscovery in the early 1980s started a revolution that is 
 
                         still unfolding. Experts now use terms like 揂sperger 
 
                         disorder?and 損ervasive development disorder?to describe 
 
                         mild variants of autism. And as the umbrella expands, more 
 
                         and more people are coming under it. 
 
     Experts now use 
 
     terms like 
 
     Asperger 
 
     disorder?and 
 
     pervasive 
 
     development 
 
     disorder?to 
 
     describe mild 
 
     variants of autism. 
 
 
 
 
 
                                 What, ultimately, makes autistic people different? How 
 
                         do they experience the world? Twenty years ago no one 
 
                         had much of a clue. But a burgeoning body of research now 
 
                         suggests that the core of all autism is a syndrome known as 
 
                         mindblindness. For most of us, mind reading comes as 
 
                         naturally as walking or chewing. We readily deduce what 
 
                         other people know and what they don抰, and we understand 
 
                         implicitly that thoughts and feelings are revealed in gestures, 
 
                         facial expressions and tone of voice. An autistic person may 
 
                         sense none of this. In one of the first studies to highlight this 
 
                         issue, researchers quizzed children about a scenario in 
 
                         which a girl named Sally places a marble in a covered 
 
                         basket and leaves the room. While Sally is out, her friend 
 
                         Anne moves the marble from the basket into a nearby 
 
                         covered box. When asked where Sally would later look for 
 
                         her marble, even retarded children knew she would expect 
 
                         to find it where she抎 left it. By contrast, most autistic 
 
                         children thought she would look in the box. They couldn抰 
 
                         see the world through Sally抯 eyes. 
 
                                 Autistic people can master Sally-Anne scenarios with 
 
                         practice, but subtler mind-reading tasks still stump them. 
 
                         They fail tests of 搒econd-order belief attribution.?(If Sally 
 
                         watches John get a miscue about an object抯 location, 
 
                         where will she expect him to look for it?) And even the 
 
                         most brilliant Asperger sufferers are easily flummoxed by 
 
                         facial expressions. In one recent study, Cambridge 
 
                         University psychologist Simon Baron-Cohen asked three of 
 
                         them梐 physicist, a computer scientist and a 
 
                         mathematician梩o match pictures of people抯 eyes to 
 
                         words like 揼rateful?or 損reoccupied.?They were lost. The 
 
                         clear implication is that our brains are wired for certain 
 
                         kinds of social awareness梐nd that this circuitry can fail 
 
                         even as the rest of the organ thrives. 
 
                                 It抯 not hard to see how mindblindness would derail a 
 
                         person抯 social development. If you can抰 perceive mental 
 
                         states, you can抰 show empathy, practice deceit or 
 
                         distinguish a joke from a threat條et alone make friends. 
 
                         Sharing becomes pointless when you can抰 see its effects on 
 
                         people, and conversation loses much of its meaning because 
 
                         you miss the unspoken intentions that hold it together. 
 
                                 Ten-year-old Jace Covert of Sagaponack, N.Y., is 
 
                         always falling into that trap. When an adult friend buys him a 
 
                         cookie, saying it 揾as your name all over it,?he replies 
 
                         earnestly that he can抰 see it there. Jace is not autistic in the 
 
                         way that Russell Rollens is. Jace spent several years in a 
 
                         mainstream private school and kept up with the curriculum. 
 
                         But his social ineptitude made him a magnet for ridicule. 
 
                         Lacking the tools to deflect it, he resorted to hitting, and the 
 
                         school eased him out. Jace is now thriving in public school 
 
                         with the help of a social-skills program, but his prospects 
 
                         are hard to gauge. 揥ill my son ever know what it feels like 
 
                         to fall in love??his mother asks. 揥hat kind of work will be 
 
                         available to him? Those are the questions I ask myself.? 
     Will my son ever 
 
     know what it feels 
 
     like to fall in 
 
     love??his mother 
 
     asks. 揥hat kind 
 
     of work will be 
 
     available to him? 
 
     Those are the 
 
     questions I ask 
 
     myself.? 
 
 
                                Romance is predictably difficult for autistic people, but 
 
                         many do brilliantly in certain lines of work. Only rarely does 
 
                         an autistic savant come along who can memorize a phone 
 
                         book in 10 minutes or measure the exact height of a building 
 
                         by glancing at it. But one autistic person in 10 shows 
 
                         exceptional skill in areas such as art, music, calculation or 
 
                         memory. And because they share a cognitive style known 
 
                         as 搘eak central coherence,?they consistently excel on 
 
                         certain mental tasks. Whereas most of us use context and 
 
                         categories to sort our perceptions, people with autism tend 
 
                         to view the world as an array of discrete particulars. 揗y 
 
                         concept of ships is linked to every specific one I抳e ever 
 
                         known,?says Temple Grandin, the autistic author and 
 
                         livestock scientist. 揟here is a Queen Mary and a Titanic, 
 
                         but there is no generic 憇hip?? 
                                 Sometimes that抯 just as well. As the British 
 
                         psychologists Uta Frith and Francesca Happe have shown 
 
                         recently, autistic people抯 blindness to contextual cues helps 
 
                         them resist optical illusions. People with autism also have a 
 
                         strong advantage on 揺mbedded figures?tests, which 
 
                         involve finding a simple shape hidden in a complex design 
 
                         (graphic). And they抮e masters at telling similar objects 
 
                         apart. With prolonged exposure, anyone starts noticing the 
 
                         uniqueness of things that look identical at a glance; that抯 
 
                         why experienced bird watchers are so good at spotting 
 
                         different subspecies of warblers. People with autism don抰 
 
                         experience this effect. Where others see forests, they see 
 
                         trees from the start. 
 
                                 People can build lives around these talents. 
 
                         Thirty-one-year-old Eric Spencer of Flemington, N.J., 
 
                         started reading when he was 18 months old. His autism has 
 
                         always confined him to well-controlled environments; he 
 
                         lives near his parents, aided by a 搇ife-skills coordinator.? 
                         But his love of letters梚ndividual letters梙as been a 
 
                         lifeline. A local library has exhibited his calligraphy, and he 
 
                         sometimes visits nursery schools to carve children抯 names 
 
                         from poster board for them. To earn money, he sorts 
 
                         documents at Ortho-MacNeil Pharmaceuticals. 揗y job,? 
                         he says, 搃s getting along perfectly.? 
    We抮e at a very 
 
     primitive stage of 
 
     research,? 
     ?DAVID AMARAL 
 
     neuroscientist 
 
                                How do people end up this way? Why do their minds 
 
                         exhibit these quirks? 揥e抮e at a very primitive stage of 
 
                         research,?says David Amaral, a neuroscientist at the 
 
                         University of California, Davis, and research director at the 
 
                         MIND Institute, which just received $34 million in state 
 
                         funding to study autism and other neurological disorders. 
 
                         揥e don抰 know what causes autism, or which areas of the 
 
                         brain are most affected.?Autopsies of autistic people have 
 
                         found that cells in the 搇imbic?regions that mediate social 
 
                         behavior are often small and densely packed, suggesting 
 
                         their early development was interrupted. And 
 
                         neural-imaging studies are showing differences in how 
 
                         autistic and nonautistic brains respond to social cues, such 
 
                         as faces or eyes. Researchers at Stanford are now launching 
 
                         a multicenter study to identify the most salient ones and 
 
                         assess their significance. 
 
                                 Other scientists are zeroing in on possible differences 
 
                         in brain chemistry. This spring, in a preliminary study, a team 
 
                         led by Dr. Karin Nelson of the National Institutes of Health 
 
                         discovered what may be a chemical marker for autism. The 
 
                         researchers identified 246 teenagers whose blood had been 
 
                         sampled at birth as part of the California Newborn 
 
                         Screening Program. Some of the teens were healthy, while 
 
                         others suffered from autism, cerebral palsy or mental 
 
                         retardation. And when the scientists examined their early 
 
                         blood samples, those from the autistic or retarded kids 
 
                         showed high levels of four proteins involved in brain 
 
                         development (VIP, CGRP, BDNF and NT4). The findings 
 
                         搒uggest that some abnormal process is already underway 
 
                         at birth,?says Dr. Judith Grether, a California 
 
                         epidemiologist who coauthored the study. If further research 
 
                         confirms the pattern, we may someday be able to test 
 
                         prenatally for autism. 
 
                                 Unfortunately, we still won抰 know what precipitates 
 
                         the condition. There is no question that heredity leaves some 
 
                         people susceptible. Roughly 5 percent of kids with autistic 
 
                         siblings have autistic disorders themselves (that抯 about 25 
 
                         times the usual rate). And the risk of autism is 75 percent 
 
                         (375 times higher than usual) among people with affected 
 
                         identical twins. Researchers are studying 揾ot spots?on 
 
                         several chromosomes that could harbor culpable genes, but 
 
                         none of those regions has been linked consistently to the 
 
                         disorder. Experts assume the problem stems not from a 
 
                         single gene but from 10 or more that occur in various 
 
                         combinations. 揈veryone agrees there is a genetic 
 
                         predisposition,?says Bristol Power of the NICHD. 揟he 
 
                         question is: what triggers the condition in people who are 
 
                         predisposed?? 
                                 This is where things get murky. Some activists, 
 
                         including Rik and Janna Rollens, fear that childhood 
 
                         vaccines may trigger autistic disorders in susceptible kids. 
 
                         Others suspect that toxic substances are somehow to 
 
                         blame. Bobbie and Billy Gallagher started to wonder about 
 
                         environmental hazards several years ago, after two of their 
 
                         three kids were diagnosed as autistic. The Gallaghers live in 
 
                         Brick Township, N.J., a working-class town with a 
 
                         well-known toxic landfill. And when they sought out other 
 
                         afflicted kids, they were surprised to find 44 of them among 
 
                         Brick抯 71,000 residents. Two years ago they demanded an 
 
                         inquiry, and they got one. In a report released this spring, 
 
                         federal investigators concluded that Brick抯 rate of autistic 
 
                         disorders was three times the 1 in 500 usually cited as the 
 
                         norm. They noted that small, intensive studies often find 
 
                         rates this high梐n indication that the official estimates may 
 
                         be low梑ut they found nothing in the landfill, the water 
 
                         supply or the local river that looked like a plausible culprit. 
 
                                 That isn抰 to say toxic substances are off the hook. 
 
                         Many of the babies exposed prenatally to thalidomide 
 
                         during the late ?0s suffered from autism as well as birth 
 
                         defects, and other substances could turn out to have similar 
 
                         effects. Dr. Eric Hollander of New York抯 Mount Sinai 
 
                         School of Medicine noticed several years ago that 60 
 
                         percent of the autistic patients in his clinic had been exposed 
 
                         in the womb to pitocin, the synthetic version of a brain 
 
                         chemical (oxytocin) that helps induce labor. That could be 
 
                         significant, since only 20 percent of all births are assisted by 
 
                         pitocin. Or it could be a meaningless coincidence. In the 
 
                         hope of finding out, Hollander is now tracking 58,000 kids 
 
                         whose mothers?treatments were monitored during 
 
                         pregnancy. 
 
                                 Until we know how to prevent autistic disorders, the 
 
                         challenge will be to help people compensate for them. The 
 
                         parents of autistic kids often swear by unconventional 
 
                         remedies (secretin, facilitated communication, auditory 
 
                         integration, special diets), but the benefits are unproven at 
 
                         best. Tranquilizers and antidepressants can help ease the 
 
                         anxiety and compulsiveness that autism causes, and 
 
                         stimulants such as Ritalin can help affected kids shift their 
 
                         attention more easily. But no medication can correct the 
 
                         disorder itself, and none is likely to take the place of 
 
                         intensive schooling. 
 
                                 The standard approach, known as Applied Behavioral 
 
                         Analysis (ABA), involves conditioning kids through constant 
 
                         reinforcement to behave appropriately. That抯 the technique 
 
                         at Sacramento抯 ABC School, a day school that boasts four 
 
                         teachers to every five kids. Whatever the task at hand? 
                         using words, recognizing facial expressions梩he teachers 
 
                         break it into discrete units and drill the kids repeatedly. 
 
                         Every success earns a token, and six tokens earn a cookie. 
 
                         To help nonverbal kids communicate, teachers give them 
 
                         notebooks filled with icons. When 4-year-old Chris hands 
 
                         teacher Jessica the icon for cheese, she gives him a piece 
 
                         and says, 揑 want cheese,?linking the phrase with the 
 
                         reward. Over time, 70 percent of the kids using this Picture 
 
                         Exchange Communication System (PECS) learn to make 
 
                         simple utterances. 
 
                                 These routines are a godsend for kids like Kyle and 
 
                         Ian Brown of Long Beach, Calif. The 8-year-old twins have 
 
                         never been easy. They climb furniture, leap from stairways 
 
                         and scale six-foot fences. Ian once made his way onto the 
 
                         nearby freeway. Lauren, their 9-year-old sister, displays 
 
                         only fondness as Kyle slaps his cheek rhythmically and Ian 
 
                         circles the kitchen table, clicking his tongue as he tries to 
 
                         snatch a can of soda. 揃ut it抯 hard here,?she says. 
 
                         揈verything抯 locked梕ven my room.?Late last year the 
 
                         twins?parents thought they抎 have to place them in an 
 
                         institution. But when an ABA-oriented school opened in 
 
                         Huntington Beach, they signed the boys up. Six months later 
 
                         both are starting to brush their teeth and dress themselves, 
 
                         and Kyle is saying things like 揑 want to go for a walk? 
                         instead of banging his head in frustration. Ian抯 language is 
 
                         limited to mimicking words, but he uses PECS to express 
 
                         needs. Dinners out are still unthinkable. But now, so is 
 
                         sending them away. 
 
                                 The ABA approach isn抰 right for everyone. Educators 
 
                         can often help higher-functioning kids build on their own 
 
                         skills and interests. Six-year-old Jack Guild of Greenwich, 
 
                         Conn., can be hard to reach, even though he has no trouble 
 
                         with language. 揂s a baby he was not loving or responsive,? 
                         his mother, Cathy, recalls. 揂nd as he got older the 
 
                         tantrums got worse. Every transition梑ed to breakfast, 
 
                         home to school梬as a flash point.?When Jack started 
 
                         seeing caseworkers at the Greenwich Autism Program last 
 
                         year, they didn抰 drill him on getting dressed. They helped 
 
                         Cathy devise routines that would heighten his sense of 
 
                         control梥imple things like letting him finish a favorite video 
 
                         in the morning, then driving him to school instead of coaxing 
 
                         him to walk. The results have been dramatic. 揑 feel like I 
 
                         have my kid back,?she says. 揂 kid who can learn and 
 
                         develop.? 
                                 As different as they sound, both strategies rest on an 
 
                         understanding that autistic kids are not willfully misbehaving, 
 
                         just trying to navigate a world they抮e not equipped to 
 
                         fathom. As Dr. Fred Volkmar of Yale wrote recently, the 
 
                         worst possible fate for such a child is to be placed in a 
 
                         program for troublemakers. When that happens, he says, 揳 
 
                         perfect victim?is surrounded by 損erfect victimizers.?If the 
 
                         new autism awareness accomplishes nothing else, it should 
 
                         spare many children that fate. With luck, it will also get them 
 
                         recognized early, when special interventions can still help. 
 
                         Only 10 percent of the autistic children entering the 
 
                         celebrated Princeton Child Development Center after age 5 
 
                         go on to enter mainstream schools梱et half of those 
 
                         recognized earlier end up making the transition. Until autism 
 
                         can be prevented or cured, that抯 a goal to strive for. 
 
 
 
 
 
                         With Donna Foote in Los Angeles and Heather Won 
 
                         Tesoriero in New York 
 
 
 
 
 
Reprinted with permission from ?2000 Newsweek, Inc. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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