This document summarizes an expert roundtable discussion on the experiences of autistic researchers conducting autism research. The roundtable includes eight autistic scholars from a variety of career stages and backgrounds.
They begin by introducing themselves and their areas of research, which include basic science, applied research, disability studies, education, neuroscience, and more. Many also have personal experience with being autistic in academia.
The discussion then focuses on how the participants' autistic identities have impacted their research and motivated them to pursue autism-related topics. Challenges of being autistic in a field dominated by non-autistic researchers are also explored.
This document summarizes key findings from research on the experiences of women with disabilities in Cambodia. The research found that women with disabilities face high levels of gender-based violence and limited autonomy due to barriers related to their gender and disability status. Women with disabilities experienced much higher rates of partner violence but were less likely to report it than women without disabilities. The research also highlighted the importance of including women with disabilities in the research process and disability organizations to ensure their voices are represented. The document describes various tools and resources developed based on the research findings, including reports, briefs, and training materials, to help inform policies and practices around disability and gender inclusion.
Undergraduate BA (Hons) Psychology Empirical ProjectJordan Purcell
This document provides a literature review and background on support workers' perspectives on counselling for those diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. It discusses key topics like the definition and prevalence of ASD, theories of person-centered therapy and pre-therapy, labelling theory, and potential barriers to counselling for those with ASD. The review was conducted as part of a larger empirical project that involved interviews with 5 support workers to understand their views on counselling and whether they see it as beneficial for clients with ASD.
Eisai employees Natalie Twine and Sarah Leacu conducted an outreach program with 7th grade students at Dr. An Wang Middle School in Lowell, MA to improve perceptions of the pharmaceutical industry. They gave a presentation on their careers in molecular biology and led a DNA extraction activity. This helped students understand disease and cancer treatment. They later hosted 30 students for a tour of Eisai's Andover facility, where students learned about drug development and different career opportunities from employees. The goal was to establish early positive connections and show students that science is accessible and practiced by diverse people to counter negative perceptions formed from media and society.
This document provides guidance on responsible research practices for psychologists. It discusses proper procedures and potential violations for collaborating on research projects, managing conflicts of interest and commitments, acquiring and sharing data, conducting human subject research, ensuring animal welfare, and mentoring less experienced researchers. Key aspects of responsible research addressed include clearly defining roles and goals for collaboration, properly addressing any financial or personal biases, making data publicly available whenever possible, obtaining informed consent and minimizing harm for human and animal subjects, and maintaining appropriate boundaries in mentoring relationships.
This document discusses the importance of science education. It provides historical context about science education in India dating back 2600 years to Taxila University. During the British rule, science education was limited but started expanding in the late 19th century with institutions like IISc. Post-independence, leaders recognized the importance of science and technology in development, leading to expansion of science education and institutions like IITs and IISERs. The document emphasizes that developing countries need to establish modern science through education to transform traditional economies based on science and technology.
The Role and Importance of ResearchWhat you’ll Learn about in th.docxssusera34210
The Role and Importance of Research
What you’ll Learn about in this Chapter:
· Who does research and why
· How research is defined and what some of its purposes are
· What a model of scientific inquiry is and how it guides research activities
· Some of the things that research is and some of the things that it isn’t
· What researchers do and how they do it
· The characteristics of good research
· How a method of scientific inquiry guides research activity
· The different types of research methods and examples of each
Say Hello to Research!
Walk down the hall in any building on your campus where social and behavioral science professors have their offices in such departments as psychology, education, nursing, sociology, and human development. Do you see any bearded, disheveled, white-coated men wearing rumpled pants and smoking pipes, hunched over their computers and mumbling to themselves? How about disheveled, white-coated women wearing rumpled skirts, smoking pipes, hunched over their computers, and mumbling to themselves?
Researchers hard at work? No. Stereotypes of what scientists look like and do? Yes. What you are more likely to see in the halls of your classroom building or in your adviser’s office are men and women of all ages who are hard at work. They are committed to finding the answer to just another piece of the great puzzle that helps us understand human behavior a little better than the previous generation of scientists.
Like everyone else, these people go to work in the morning, but unlike many others, these researchers have a passion for understanding what they study and for coming as close as possible to finding the “truth.” Although these truths can be elusive and sometimes even unobtainable, researchers work toward discovering them for the satisfaction of answering important questions and then using this new information to help others. Early intervention programs, treatments of psychopathology, new curricula, conflict resolution techniques, effective drug treatment programs, and even changes in policy and law have resulted from evidence collected by researchers. Although not always perfect, each little bit of evidence gained from a new study or a new idea for a study contributes to a vast legacy of knowledge for the next generation of researchers such as yourself.
You may already know and appreciate something about the world of research. The purpose of this book is to provide you with the tools you need to do even more, such as
Today, more than ever, decisions are evidence based, and what these researchers do is collect evidence that serves as a basis for informed decisions.
· develop an understanding of the research process.
· prepare yourself to conduct research of your own.
· learn how to judge the quality of research.
· learn how to read, search through, and summarize other research.
· learn the value of research activities conducted online.
· reveal the mysteries of basic statistics and show you how easily they can be ...
This document summarizes key findings from research on the experiences of women with disabilities in Cambodia. The research found that women with disabilities face high levels of gender-based violence and limited autonomy due to barriers related to their gender and disability status. Women with disabilities experienced much higher rates of partner violence but were less likely to report it than women without disabilities. The research also highlighted the importance of including women with disabilities in the research process and disability organizations to ensure their voices are represented. The document describes various tools and resources developed based on the research findings, including reports, briefs, and training materials, to help inform policies and practices around disability and gender inclusion.
Undergraduate BA (Hons) Psychology Empirical ProjectJordan Purcell
This document provides a literature review and background on support workers' perspectives on counselling for those diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. It discusses key topics like the definition and prevalence of ASD, theories of person-centered therapy and pre-therapy, labelling theory, and potential barriers to counselling for those with ASD. The review was conducted as part of a larger empirical project that involved interviews with 5 support workers to understand their views on counselling and whether they see it as beneficial for clients with ASD.
Eisai employees Natalie Twine and Sarah Leacu conducted an outreach program with 7th grade students at Dr. An Wang Middle School in Lowell, MA to improve perceptions of the pharmaceutical industry. They gave a presentation on their careers in molecular biology and led a DNA extraction activity. This helped students understand disease and cancer treatment. They later hosted 30 students for a tour of Eisai's Andover facility, where students learned about drug development and different career opportunities from employees. The goal was to establish early positive connections and show students that science is accessible and practiced by diverse people to counter negative perceptions formed from media and society.
This document provides guidance on responsible research practices for psychologists. It discusses proper procedures and potential violations for collaborating on research projects, managing conflicts of interest and commitments, acquiring and sharing data, conducting human subject research, ensuring animal welfare, and mentoring less experienced researchers. Key aspects of responsible research addressed include clearly defining roles and goals for collaboration, properly addressing any financial or personal biases, making data publicly available whenever possible, obtaining informed consent and minimizing harm for human and animal subjects, and maintaining appropriate boundaries in mentoring relationships.
This document discusses the importance of science education. It provides historical context about science education in India dating back 2600 years to Taxila University. During the British rule, science education was limited but started expanding in the late 19th century with institutions like IISc. Post-independence, leaders recognized the importance of science and technology in development, leading to expansion of science education and institutions like IITs and IISERs. The document emphasizes that developing countries need to establish modern science through education to transform traditional economies based on science and technology.
The Role and Importance of ResearchWhat you’ll Learn about in th.docxssusera34210
The Role and Importance of Research
What you’ll Learn about in this Chapter:
· Who does research and why
· How research is defined and what some of its purposes are
· What a model of scientific inquiry is and how it guides research activities
· Some of the things that research is and some of the things that it isn’t
· What researchers do and how they do it
· The characteristics of good research
· How a method of scientific inquiry guides research activity
· The different types of research methods and examples of each
Say Hello to Research!
Walk down the hall in any building on your campus where social and behavioral science professors have their offices in such departments as psychology, education, nursing, sociology, and human development. Do you see any bearded, disheveled, white-coated men wearing rumpled pants and smoking pipes, hunched over their computers and mumbling to themselves? How about disheveled, white-coated women wearing rumpled skirts, smoking pipes, hunched over their computers, and mumbling to themselves?
Researchers hard at work? No. Stereotypes of what scientists look like and do? Yes. What you are more likely to see in the halls of your classroom building or in your adviser’s office are men and women of all ages who are hard at work. They are committed to finding the answer to just another piece of the great puzzle that helps us understand human behavior a little better than the previous generation of scientists.
Like everyone else, these people go to work in the morning, but unlike many others, these researchers have a passion for understanding what they study and for coming as close as possible to finding the “truth.” Although these truths can be elusive and sometimes even unobtainable, researchers work toward discovering them for the satisfaction of answering important questions and then using this new information to help others. Early intervention programs, treatments of psychopathology, new curricula, conflict resolution techniques, effective drug treatment programs, and even changes in policy and law have resulted from evidence collected by researchers. Although not always perfect, each little bit of evidence gained from a new study or a new idea for a study contributes to a vast legacy of knowledge for the next generation of researchers such as yourself.
You may already know and appreciate something about the world of research. The purpose of this book is to provide you with the tools you need to do even more, such as
Today, more than ever, decisions are evidence based, and what these researchers do is collect evidence that serves as a basis for informed decisions.
· develop an understanding of the research process.
· prepare yourself to conduct research of your own.
· learn how to judge the quality of research.
· learn how to read, search through, and summarize other research.
· learn the value of research activities conducted online.
· reveal the mysteries of basic statistics and show you how easily they can be ...
Animal Experimentation Successes And Clinical Research...Laura Arrigo
This essay discusses the politics and economics surrounding the FDA's drug approval process. There is pressure on the FDA from Congress, the public, and pharmaceutical companies to speed up approval of new drugs. While faster approval can help patients, it may compromise safety. The FDA must balance these competing interests. The essay provides historical context on the FDA's evolution and expanded authorities over time to regulate an increasing scope of products that impact public health and safety. It also notes the appointment of Jane Heney as the first female FDA commissioner in 1998.
The document discusses the history of the diagnosis of hysteria and how it exemplifies psychiatry's historical failure to incorporate patient narratives, particularly those of women and other marginalized groups, leading to misguided theories about the causes and treatment of mental illness. It traces the diagnosis of hysteria from ancient Egypt through the Middle Ages and into the 19th century, when physicians began establishing a clinical definition, but the diagnosis still reflected the lack of diversity and gender bias among medical experts who developed understandings of mental illness.
This document provides a summary of a project proposal to design a school for students with autism in Nashville, Tennessee. It begins with an introduction stating the importance of designing spaces to enhance well-being and increase independence for those with disabilities like autism. It then outlines the project statement, background on autism spectrum disorder, current issues with autism education in Tennessee, and a conceptual framework for the proposed school's design. The document concludes with sections on site analysis and technical solutions.
Using Figure 1.2 in Ch. 1 of Exploring Research, create a flowchar.docxdickonsondorris
Using Figure 1.2 in Ch. 1 of Exploring Research, create a flowchart using Microsoft® Word or a similar program that helps you identify what research design to use for your research question.
Ch. 1 of Exploring Research The Role and Importance of Research
What you’ll Learn about in this Chapter:
· Who does research and why
· How research is defined and what some of its purposes are
· What a model of scientific inquiry is and how it guides research activities
· Some of the things that research is and some of the things that it isn’t
· What researchers do and how they do it
· The characteristics of good research
· How a method of scientific inquiry guides research activity
· The different types of research methods and examples of each
Say Hello to Research!
Walk down the hall in any building on your campus where social and behavioral science professors have their offices in such departments as psychology, education, nursing, sociology, and human development. Do you see any bearded, disheveled, white-coated men wearing rumpled pants and smoking pipes, hunched over their computers and mumbling to themselves? How about disheveled, white-coated women wearing rumpled skirts, smoking pipes, hunched over their computers, and mumbling to themselves?
Researchers hard at work? No. Stereotypes of what scientists look like and do? Yes. What you are more likely to see in the halls of your classroom building or in your adviser’s office are men and women of all ages who are hard at work. They are committed to finding the answer to just another piece of the great puzzle that helps us understand human behavior a little better than the previous generation of scientists.
Like everyone else, these people go to work in the morning, but unlike many others, these researchers have a passion for understanding what they study and for coming as close as possible to finding the “truth.” Although these truths can be elusive and sometimes even unobtainable, researchers work toward discovering them for the satisfaction of answering important questions and then using this new information to help others. Early intervention programs, treatments of psychopathology, new curricula, conflict resolution techniques, effective drug treatment programs, and even changes in policy and law have resulted from evidence collected by researchers. Although not always perfect, each little bit of evidence gained from a new study or a new idea for a study contributes to a vast legacy of knowledge for the next generation of researchers such as yourself.
You may already know and appreciate something about the world of research. The purpose of this book is to provide you with the tools you need to do even more, such as
Today, more than ever, decisions are evidence based, and what these researchers do is collect evidence that serves as a basis for informed decisions.
· develop an understanding of the research process.
· prepare yourself to conduct research of your own.
· learn how to ...
The document discusses factors that influence people in New Zealand to use complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). CAM is broadly defined as health practices outside of mainstream medicine in a given society. The New Zealand health system uses a definition of CAM as practices intended to prevent or treat illness or promote well-being that are self-defined as such by users. While New Zealand lacks recent data on CAM use, past surveys show little is known about the social and psychological reasons behind why people choose CAM. More research is needed to better understand people's motivations for using CAM in New Zealand.
Running head DOWN’S SYNDROME-REVISION OF LITERATURE REVIEW 1.docxsusanschei
Running head: DOWN’S SYNDROME-REVISION OF LITERATURE REVIEW 1
DOWN’S SYNDROME-REVISION OF LITERATURE REVIEW 2
Down’s Syndrome-Revision of Literature Review
Mary Katz
Columbia Southern University
Down’s Syndrome-Revision of Literature Review
Down’s syndrome is a genetic disorder in human beings characterized by a diminished mental ability, distinctive features on the face, and muscle weakness. Such patients have a lot of difficulties in coping up with the world and the society in it. They put their family members in a fixed predicament. Some patients are therefore taken to health institutions which are supposed to make them “better.” However, according to a variety of literature, the mental facilitates have both their advantages and disadvantages. This has led to a debate about whether the institutions are the perfect environment for “curing” patients with the Down’s syndrome. The pro side is that the mental facilities have trained professionals that offer ideal treatment and rehabilitation services to the patients. The treatment sometimes guarantees the physical well-being of the patients. The recovered patients have been known to take part in many social activities like sports and also art. They have been known to come up with unique artistic works. This is because the rehabilitation centers let them focus on their passions. However, on the con side, the institutions are meant to separate the patients from the rest of the society, including their immediate family members. Segregating patients with the Downs’ syndrome may lead to the development of antisocial behavior. For example, patients may tend to seclude themselves and fear to talk to other people despite being physically treated of the condition. The antisocial behavior makes them be termed as “weirdos” in the society. They are thus avoided and neglected by the other members due to their strange behaviors. The con side appeals to the humane behavior of people associating with patients of the Down’s syndrome. The literature review provides adequate knowledge on the subject; it emphasizes on developing empathy for the patients rather than sympathizing with them. This essay is a revision of the literature review of this study; it discusses the terminology, history and the two sides of the controversy (cons and pros).
The primary objective of the literature review provided in this study is to find out the pros and cons associated with treating people with the Down’s syndrome. The research can, therefore, be used as a platform to recommend the appropriate treatment procedures to be used by people associated with patients with this disorder. The research made was adequate to support the conclusion that the current institutions need modification to ensure that children coming out of the facilities are all rounded. Learning from Graaf (2002), it is clear that integrating both types of children (those with the condition and those without) is a terrible idea. This is because the ...
This document summarizes the president's column from the CAPE Chronicle. It discusses how collaborative learning communities and connections with like-minded peers and colleagues can greatly enhance research in fields like epidemiology and mental health. CAPE provides these opportunities for researchers interested in mental health epidemiology. The president highlights how CAPE's small size allows for intimate interactions and networking between members. CAPE has supported many collaborative projects and initiatives over the years.
The document discusses various intervention methods considered best practices for children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). It categorizes the interventions into five groups: 1) technology such as iPads, computers, voice recorders and software; 2) pharmacological treatments including the FDA approved medications risperidone and aripiprazole; 3) models, prompts, reinforcers and self-management techniques; 4) early intensive behavioral intervention and applied behavioral analysis; and 5) gluten-free and casein-free diets. The purpose of the study is to understand the experiences of families and educators implementing these strategies in order to identify their successes and challenges.
Here are some key advantages and disadvantages of third-party funding in arbitration:
Potential Advantages:
- Provides access to justice for parties who cannot afford arbitration costs. This allows more disputes to be resolved through arbitration rather than litigation.
- Spreads financial risk across multiple disputes, allowing third party funders to take on riskier cases.
- May increase efficiency by allowing parties to invest more resources into strong cases.
Potential Disadvantages:
- Raises conflicts of interest if third party funders influence procedural or settlement decisions for financial gain rather than merits.
- May increase costs of arbitration overall if third party funders factor in a return on multiple disputes.
- Lack of regulation could lead to predat
Chelsee Smith is a student at Norfolk State University studying for a Bachelor of Science degree expected in May 2017. She has worked in several biology labs assisting with experiments involving fruit flies, okra, and microbiology. Her goal is to attend graduate school to obtain a PhD in biological research and make breakthrough discoveries to cure diseases. She is involved in campus organizations such as the Christian Student Fellowship and National Society of Black Engineers, and volunteers with Girl Scouts and the local ASPCA. Chelsee has strong computer and laboratory skills and strives to be a leader, effective communicator, and ensure an optimal work environment.
Business Proposal Letter THE RESEARCH PROPOMartha Brown
1. The document describes the steps to request assignment writing help from HelpWriting.net, including creating an account, submitting a request form, reviewing writer bids, selecting a writer, and revising the completed paper.
2. Students complete a form providing instructions, sources, and deadline for their assignment. Writers then bid on the request and students choose a writer based on qualifications.
3. The platform uses a bidding system where students pay a deposit after selecting a writer, and can request free revisions to ensure satisfaction with the original, plagiarism-free content provided.
What Are The Best Research Methods For WritersMartha Brown
Web analytics can help businesses in three key ways:
1. It provides insights into customer behavior on websites to help optimize the user experience.
2. Data from analytics can be used to improve marketing campaigns and increase their effectiveness.
3. Analytics allows businesses to test different content and page designs to see what performs best, helping the organization stay competitive.
(PDF) Editorial - Writing For PublicationMartha Brown
The document provides instructions for requesting writing assistance from HelpWriting.net. It is a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with a password and email. 2) Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one based on qualifications. 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment if satisfied. 5) Request revisions to ensure needs are fully met, with a refund offered for plagiarized work.
Canada Role In World Essay United Nations InternatiMartha Brown
This document discusses a study on high-rise apartments and the fire dangers they pose. It notes that high-rise buildings allow fires to easily spread vertically up walls. The study aims to understand fire dynamics in high-rises and improve fire safety measures. It will examine how factors like construction materials, compartmentalization, and evacuation routes impact fire spread and survival. The results could help update building codes to reduce fire risks in high-rise residential towers.
5 Best Images Of 12-Sided Snowflake Printable TemplMartha Brown
This document summarizes the key themes and symbols in Homer's epic poem "The Odyssey". It discusses how Homer uses symbolism to portray themes of using one's wits over strength, man's weakness to temptation, the desire for revenge, and loyalty. It provides examples from the text, such as Odysseus outwitting the cyclops and protecting his crew from the Sirens' song, to illustrate how Odysseus overcomes challenges using his intelligence rather than brute force.
Monster Page Borders (Teacher Made). Online assignment writing service.Martha Brown
The document provides instructions for creating an account and submitting assignment requests on the HelpWriting.net website. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with an email and password. 2) Complete a form with assignment details. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one. 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment. 5) Request revisions until satisfied. It emphasizes that original, high-quality work is guaranteed or a full refund will be provided.
How To Resource In An Essay Salt Lake Juvenile DefenseMartha Brown
The document provides an overview of the Gilded Age in American history from the late 19th century. It was a time of rapid industrialization and economic growth that led to massive fortunes for some businessmen, but also struggles for workers and farmers. New technologies and big businesses revolutionized the economy but also exploited laborers. While opportunities increased, so did the tensions between social classes. Overall, the Gilded Age was a vibrant yet unpredictable era that transformed the United States.
How To Write A Play Script (With Pictures) - WikiHowMartha Brown
This document discusses the importance of after-sales service for online marketing. It defines after-sales service and explains how it enhances customer satisfaction and influences purchase intentions. While after-sales service increases pressure on employees, it is important for business success by allowing companies to obtain customer feedback and maintain customer satisfaction, which should be the primary goal. A good after-sales service system can help online businesses be more customer-oriented.
How To Write A Great Narrative Essay. How Do YMartha Brown
The document discusses the best practice procedures established by the CLS (Continuous Linked
Settlement) for its members. The CLS has set up risk management procedures including testing
institutions before they are accepted. This testing includes requirements for institutions to have a
positive overall account balance, short position limits in currencies, and aggregate short positions.
Apa Itu Template What Is Template ImagesMartha Brown
This briefing discusses the selection and acquisition of a new healthcare information system. It outlines a proposed process involving defining requirements, evaluating vendor options, selecting a vendor, and implementing the new system. The goal is to replace the current aging system and improve operations, quality of care, and patient experience through a modern digital platform. Selecting the right system is important to enable better care delivery and support the organization's strategic goals.
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This essay discusses the politics and economics surrounding the FDA's drug approval process. There is pressure on the FDA from Congress, the public, and pharmaceutical companies to speed up approval of new drugs. While faster approval can help patients, it may compromise safety. The FDA must balance these competing interests. The essay provides historical context on the FDA's evolution and expanded authorities over time to regulate an increasing scope of products that impact public health and safety. It also notes the appointment of Jane Heney as the first female FDA commissioner in 1998.
The document discusses the history of the diagnosis of hysteria and how it exemplifies psychiatry's historical failure to incorporate patient narratives, particularly those of women and other marginalized groups, leading to misguided theories about the causes and treatment of mental illness. It traces the diagnosis of hysteria from ancient Egypt through the Middle Ages and into the 19th century, when physicians began establishing a clinical definition, but the diagnosis still reflected the lack of diversity and gender bias among medical experts who developed understandings of mental illness.
This document provides a summary of a project proposal to design a school for students with autism in Nashville, Tennessee. It begins with an introduction stating the importance of designing spaces to enhance well-being and increase independence for those with disabilities like autism. It then outlines the project statement, background on autism spectrum disorder, current issues with autism education in Tennessee, and a conceptual framework for the proposed school's design. The document concludes with sections on site analysis and technical solutions.
Using Figure 1.2 in Ch. 1 of Exploring Research, create a flowchar.docxdickonsondorris
Using Figure 1.2 in Ch. 1 of Exploring Research, create a flowchart using Microsoft® Word or a similar program that helps you identify what research design to use for your research question.
Ch. 1 of Exploring Research The Role and Importance of Research
What you’ll Learn about in this Chapter:
· Who does research and why
· How research is defined and what some of its purposes are
· What a model of scientific inquiry is and how it guides research activities
· Some of the things that research is and some of the things that it isn’t
· What researchers do and how they do it
· The characteristics of good research
· How a method of scientific inquiry guides research activity
· The different types of research methods and examples of each
Say Hello to Research!
Walk down the hall in any building on your campus where social and behavioral science professors have their offices in such departments as psychology, education, nursing, sociology, and human development. Do you see any bearded, disheveled, white-coated men wearing rumpled pants and smoking pipes, hunched over their computers and mumbling to themselves? How about disheveled, white-coated women wearing rumpled skirts, smoking pipes, hunched over their computers, and mumbling to themselves?
Researchers hard at work? No. Stereotypes of what scientists look like and do? Yes. What you are more likely to see in the halls of your classroom building or in your adviser’s office are men and women of all ages who are hard at work. They are committed to finding the answer to just another piece of the great puzzle that helps us understand human behavior a little better than the previous generation of scientists.
Like everyone else, these people go to work in the morning, but unlike many others, these researchers have a passion for understanding what they study and for coming as close as possible to finding the “truth.” Although these truths can be elusive and sometimes even unobtainable, researchers work toward discovering them for the satisfaction of answering important questions and then using this new information to help others. Early intervention programs, treatments of psychopathology, new curricula, conflict resolution techniques, effective drug treatment programs, and even changes in policy and law have resulted from evidence collected by researchers. Although not always perfect, each little bit of evidence gained from a new study or a new idea for a study contributes to a vast legacy of knowledge for the next generation of researchers such as yourself.
You may already know and appreciate something about the world of research. The purpose of this book is to provide you with the tools you need to do even more, such as
Today, more than ever, decisions are evidence based, and what these researchers do is collect evidence that serves as a basis for informed decisions.
· develop an understanding of the research process.
· prepare yourself to conduct research of your own.
· learn how to ...
The document discusses factors that influence people in New Zealand to use complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). CAM is broadly defined as health practices outside of mainstream medicine in a given society. The New Zealand health system uses a definition of CAM as practices intended to prevent or treat illness or promote well-being that are self-defined as such by users. While New Zealand lacks recent data on CAM use, past surveys show little is known about the social and psychological reasons behind why people choose CAM. More research is needed to better understand people's motivations for using CAM in New Zealand.
Running head DOWN’S SYNDROME-REVISION OF LITERATURE REVIEW 1.docxsusanschei
Running head: DOWN’S SYNDROME-REVISION OF LITERATURE REVIEW 1
DOWN’S SYNDROME-REVISION OF LITERATURE REVIEW 2
Down’s Syndrome-Revision of Literature Review
Mary Katz
Columbia Southern University
Down’s Syndrome-Revision of Literature Review
Down’s syndrome is a genetic disorder in human beings characterized by a diminished mental ability, distinctive features on the face, and muscle weakness. Such patients have a lot of difficulties in coping up with the world and the society in it. They put their family members in a fixed predicament. Some patients are therefore taken to health institutions which are supposed to make them “better.” However, according to a variety of literature, the mental facilitates have both their advantages and disadvantages. This has led to a debate about whether the institutions are the perfect environment for “curing” patients with the Down’s syndrome. The pro side is that the mental facilities have trained professionals that offer ideal treatment and rehabilitation services to the patients. The treatment sometimes guarantees the physical well-being of the patients. The recovered patients have been known to take part in many social activities like sports and also art. They have been known to come up with unique artistic works. This is because the rehabilitation centers let them focus on their passions. However, on the con side, the institutions are meant to separate the patients from the rest of the society, including their immediate family members. Segregating patients with the Downs’ syndrome may lead to the development of antisocial behavior. For example, patients may tend to seclude themselves and fear to talk to other people despite being physically treated of the condition. The antisocial behavior makes them be termed as “weirdos” in the society. They are thus avoided and neglected by the other members due to their strange behaviors. The con side appeals to the humane behavior of people associating with patients of the Down’s syndrome. The literature review provides adequate knowledge on the subject; it emphasizes on developing empathy for the patients rather than sympathizing with them. This essay is a revision of the literature review of this study; it discusses the terminology, history and the two sides of the controversy (cons and pros).
The primary objective of the literature review provided in this study is to find out the pros and cons associated with treating people with the Down’s syndrome. The research can, therefore, be used as a platform to recommend the appropriate treatment procedures to be used by people associated with patients with this disorder. The research made was adequate to support the conclusion that the current institutions need modification to ensure that children coming out of the facilities are all rounded. Learning from Graaf (2002), it is clear that integrating both types of children (those with the condition and those without) is a terrible idea. This is because the ...
This document summarizes the president's column from the CAPE Chronicle. It discusses how collaborative learning communities and connections with like-minded peers and colleagues can greatly enhance research in fields like epidemiology and mental health. CAPE provides these opportunities for researchers interested in mental health epidemiology. The president highlights how CAPE's small size allows for intimate interactions and networking between members. CAPE has supported many collaborative projects and initiatives over the years.
The document discusses various intervention methods considered best practices for children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). It categorizes the interventions into five groups: 1) technology such as iPads, computers, voice recorders and software; 2) pharmacological treatments including the FDA approved medications risperidone and aripiprazole; 3) models, prompts, reinforcers and self-management techniques; 4) early intensive behavioral intervention and applied behavioral analysis; and 5) gluten-free and casein-free diets. The purpose of the study is to understand the experiences of families and educators implementing these strategies in order to identify their successes and challenges.
Here are some key advantages and disadvantages of third-party funding in arbitration:
Potential Advantages:
- Provides access to justice for parties who cannot afford arbitration costs. This allows more disputes to be resolved through arbitration rather than litigation.
- Spreads financial risk across multiple disputes, allowing third party funders to take on riskier cases.
- May increase efficiency by allowing parties to invest more resources into strong cases.
Potential Disadvantages:
- Raises conflicts of interest if third party funders influence procedural or settlement decisions for financial gain rather than merits.
- May increase costs of arbitration overall if third party funders factor in a return on multiple disputes.
- Lack of regulation could lead to predat
Chelsee Smith is a student at Norfolk State University studying for a Bachelor of Science degree expected in May 2017. She has worked in several biology labs assisting with experiments involving fruit flies, okra, and microbiology. Her goal is to attend graduate school to obtain a PhD in biological research and make breakthrough discoveries to cure diseases. She is involved in campus organizations such as the Christian Student Fellowship and National Society of Black Engineers, and volunteers with Girl Scouts and the local ASPCA. Chelsee has strong computer and laboratory skills and strives to be a leader, effective communicator, and ensure an optimal work environment.
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An Expert Roundtable Discussion On Experiences Of Autistic Autism Researchers
1. Roundtable
An Expert Roundtable Discussion on Experiences
of Autistic Autism Researchers
Moderator: Patrick Dwyer, MA1,2,i
Participants: Sara M. Acevedo, PhD,3,ii
Heather M. Brown, PhD, MEd,4,iii
Jordan Grapel, MS,5,iv
Sandra C. Jones, MBA, MPH, PhD,6,v
Brett Ranon Nachman, MS, PhD,7,vi
Dora M. Raymaker, PhD,8,9,vii
and Zachary J. Williams, BS10–13,viii
Introduction
Historically, few autism researchers have been
openly autistic. Indeed, the institutions, practices, and
culture of autism research have largely been shaped by
nonautistic people. Insofar as nonautistic people may
struggle to understand autistic perspectives and communi-
cate effectively with autistic people, as suggested by the
concept of the double empathy problem1
and by empirical
research,2–4
this could have serious repercussions for the
quality and relevance of autism research. Fortunately, a
growing number of openly autistic scholars have begun to
make their presence known in the autism field.5
For ex-
ample, autistic researchers are visible in the Participatory
Autism Research Collective, in the International Society
for Autism Research (INSAR) Autistic Researchers Com-
mittee, in social media groups for autistic researchers, and
via the #AutisticsinAcademia hashtag, and through nu-
merous other initiatives and organizations, including this
journal. Although these autistic autism researchers might
be well positioned to act as a countervailing force against
the double empathy problem, being autistic in a field
shaped and dominated by nonautistic people could also be a
source of challenges and tensions. Unfortunately, no aca-
demic articles focusing on autistic scholars in autism re-
search currently exist in the literature, which could impede
efforts to promote the success of autistic autism research-
ers. This roundtable discussion provides an initial explo-
ration of this important topic.
This discussion focuses specifically on autistic
scholars—such as graduate students, postdoctoral fellows,
and faculty—who are conducting autism and disability re-
search. We chose this focus to allow a more in-depth dis-
cussion. As such, this roundtable does not focus on the
involvement of autistic people in autism research as com-
munity partners or coresearchers. Although the involvement
of autistic community members in research teams is an im-
portant topic for the field, it has been discussed in other
publications.6–11
Furthermore, while the accessibility of
university-based clinical programs (e.g., medical, education,
social work, and clinical psychology) does affect the repre-
sentation of autistic people in occupations that are responsi-
ble for providing important services and supports to autistic
individuals, this is a distinct and separate topic from autism
research. Finally, this roundtable does not explore experi-
ences of autistic people conducting research in fields unre-
lated to autism. It is possible that being an autistic researcher
in nonautism fields may be associated with some tensions and
challenges that meaningfully differ from tensions facing
autistic autism researchers.
1
Center for Mind and Brain, University of California at Davis, Davis, California, USA.
2
Department of Psychology, University of California at Davis, Davis, California, USA.
3
Department of Disability Studies, Miami University, Miami, Ohio, USA.
4
Department of Educational Psychology, University of Alberta, Alberta, Canada.
5
Duke Center for Autism and Brain Development, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
6
Department of Engagement, Australian Catholic University, Melbourne, Australia.
7
Belk Center for Community College Leadership and Research, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.
8
Department of Social Work, Portland State University, Portland, Oregon, USA.
9
Department of Research and Education, Portland State University, Portland, Oregon, USA.
10
Medical Scientist Training Program, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
11
Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
12
Vanderbilt Brain Institute, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
13
Frist Center for Autism and Innovation, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
i
ORCID ID (https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1779-5252).
ii
ORCID ID (https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6729-3432).
iii
ORCID ID (https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5290-0057).
iv
ORCID ID (https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6633-8309).
v
ORCID ID (https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0258-3348).
vi
ORCID ID (https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3066-0598).
vii
ORCID ID (https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8237-6041).
viii
ORCID ID (https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7646-423X).
AUTISM IN ADULTHOOD
Volume 3, Number 3, 2021
ª Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
DOI: 10.1089/aut.2021.29019.rtb
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2. Mr. Patrick Dwyer: Today, we have brought together a
group of autistic scholars to highlight the contributions that
autistic autism researchers are increasingly making to au-
tism research, to discuss the challenges and tensions that
autistic autism researchers still face, and to explore and
suggest changes that might address those tensions and en-
sure that autistic people can thrive as autism researchers.
We strove to ensure that this panel would include a di-
versity of perspectives. Our panelists are autistic re-
searchers who conduct a variety of different types of
autism and disability research, including basic science,
applied research, and humanities scholarship. Our expert
panelists also come from a variety of career stages, from
graduate students through senior faculty. Furthermore,
several of our expert panelists not only have personal lived
experience of being autistic in academia, but also have
experience conducting research regarding, or engaging in
service or advocacy on behalf of, the emerging community
of autistic people in academia.
We will begin our discussion by asking each of the par-
ticipants in our discussion to introduce themselves.
I am an autistic PhD candidate at UC Davis, where I
primarily focus on researching sensory processing, at-
tention, and hyperfocus in autism. I also do some research
regarding other topics, such as neurodiversity and edu-
cation. I am one of two Co-chairs of the INSAR Autistic
Researchers Committee. Finally, I facilitate a UC Davis
peer support community for neurodivergent students, and
the membership of that group includes both undergradu-
ate and graduate students.
Dr. Sara M. Acevedo: I am an assistant professor of disability
studies at Miami University, where I have been on the tenure
line for close to 3 years. I am a linguist, anthropologist, and
disability studies scholar by training. My work is situated at the
productive intersection of spatial politics, self-governance, and
transgressive discourse—neurodivergent grassroots organiz-
ing is a central topic in my research. I use critical qualitative
methods and collaborative/emancipatory research; I identify
as a scholar–activist.
Dr. Heather M. Brown: I am an associate professor in the
department of educational sychology at the University of
Alberta in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, where I try to help
current and future educators understand how to best support
neurodivergent students in the regular classroom. My re-
search aims to uncover strategies to support the academic
achievement and overall well-being of autistic children,
youth, and adults.
Mr. Jordan Grapel: I am currently a clinical research spe-
cialist on the neuroscience team for the Duke Center of
Autism and Brain Development. I run most for our electro-
encephalography (EEG) and eye-tracking sessions for a
number of different studies that all generally try to identify
biomarkers for autism.
Dr. Sandra C. Jones: I am the pro vice-chancellor, en-
gagement, at Australian Catholic University in Australia. My
research focuses on autism acceptance and inclusion, pri-
marily the experiences of autistic adults in education, em-
ployment, and engagement with the community.
Dr. Brett Ranon Nachman: I am a postdoctoral research
scholar at the Belk Center for Community College Leadership
and Research at North Carolina State University. I am the
director of research for the College Autism Network as well.
I am studying higher education, and one of my main areas of
focus entails uncovering the experiences and perceptions of
autistic college students. Each year I work with my colleagues
in developing the College Autism Summit that invites autistic
self-advocates, practitioners and scholars, educators, and
community members as we address issues facing research and
practice related to autistic college students.
Dr. Dora M. Raymaker: I am a systems scientist and research
assistant professor at Portland State University’s Regional
Research Institute for Human Services, in the School of Social
Work. I am also the co-director of a community-based par-
ticipatory research group, the Academic Autism Spectrum
Partnership in Research and Education (AASPIRE; aaspir-
e.org). I conduct applied services and intervention research.
My current focus is on improving employment outcomes for
autistic people in skilled settings, including research.
Mr. Zachary J. Williams: I am an MD/PhD candidate in
neuroscience and hearing and speech sciences at Vanderbilt
University in Nashville. My research focuses on measuring
and predicting the health and well-being of autistic adults,
with a specific focus on mental health symptoms and sensory
differences. I also serve as the secretary of the INSAR Au-
tistic Researchers Committee and as a member of the Autism
Intervention Research Network on Physical Health (AIR-P)
Autistic Researcher Review Board, and also a consultant for
Roche.
Mr. Dwyer: Thank you all. Let us move on to the questions.
First, how has your autistic identity impacted your re-
search? What led you to pursue autism research? Are there
other identities intersecting with autism that have affected
your research?
Dr. Acevedo: Yes. I cannot speak of my autistic identity
without simultaneously drawing attention to the fact that I am
a Mestiza woman, an immigrant—I was born and raised in
Colombia, South America—and someone who lives with
chronic illness. I have written at length about the com-
pounding impact that my gendered and racialized identities
have as they intersect with my disabilities. I center lived ex-
perience and situated knowledges12
in my research—in other
words, there is no view from nowhere or decontextualized
research method that I think has as much impact as embodied
knowing does, at least when it comes to social justice and
sustainable transformation. Others will of course beg to differ.
Dr. Brown: I first truly learned about autism as an elemen-
tary school teacher in the Canadian educational system.
There had been a little boy with autism in my grade 2 class
and I soon began to wonder whether my grade-2-self would
have looked and acted much as he did. At the same time, I
was also a relatively new mother of my own neurodivergent
son. After doing a great deal of reading, talking to therapists,
and getting a formal diagnosis, I made the difficult decision to
leave the classroom and return to grad school. Given my love
of psychology and learning along with my new understanding
210 ROUNDTABLE
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3. of my autistic traits and aptitudes, I wanted to explore whether
scientific research and academia would be work environment
within which I could thrive. And, in many ways, it has been a
really good fit. Lastly, although there have been many systemic
barriers in my life, I also want to acknowledge that I have had a
great deal of privilege to be where I am today.
Mr. Grapel: I would say that out of my many identities, autism
has definitely been the one that has been the most impactful on
the course of my life. I am also a cis half-White Jewish male, so
I like to call myself the worst dancer on the planet. But I was not
told about my autism diagnosis until I was about 15 years, and I
did not think much of it until a few weeks later, when a club that
I was in basically lied to me and tried to have meetings without
my knowing, and that was one of the worst days of my life.
I basically realized that everything that happened there boiled
down to a lack of understanding between both them and me
about social protocol: me not understanding social protocol and
them not understanding how to deal with me. That experience
made me want to help other socially awkward kids with As-
perger’s, like me, not have to deal with that in the future, and
that is why I am here.
Dr. Jones: I first began working in autism research before I
was diagnosed, but after both of my sons were diagnosed.
I had always been interested in the area, but for a long time I
stayed away from actively researching autism, because I
bought into the prevailing mythology that people instill in
you: my personal connection to the topic would make my
research less objective and, therefore, less valid. I certainly
do not hold that view now, but at the time I took that on board.
I took my first tentative steps as an autism researcher after my
children were in their teens, because I was just so frustrated
with the issues they experienced and the very scientific and
ableist body of literature that was available. I started with
researching the media representation of autism, then the ex-
periences of autistic adolescents and their families, and this
grew to become a much broader body of research. It was not
until my formal diagnosis that I began to identify specifically
as an autism researcher rather than a researcher who does
some autism-related projects among other things.
Dr. Nachman: In my research endeavors, I always recognize
the privileges that I carry as a White cisgender male whose
societal status as a recent PhD positions me in a powerful
role, so my perspective as an autistic person is truly one of
many, and I feel it is my responsibility to broaden concep-
tualizations of who belongs to this very diverse and rich
community. Being gay adds another dimension to my work,
and that has enabled me to uncover the nuances of ‘‘coming
out’’ within both the LGBTQ and autism communities.
I grew to study autism in higher education and later to do
work related to LGBTQ+ campus climates as a reflection of
my desire to be more connected to communities in which I
belong, which I did not do much during my youth. My re-
search aims to elevate autistic college students’ perspectives
that have long been absent from higher education scholarship
until more recently, so I consider it a duty to carry my
viewpoints of the world alongside those of autistic partici-
pants to the forefront of stakeholders’ attention, especially
because there are sadly very few autistic voices in higher
education research engaging in such inquiry.
Dr. Raymaker: I started out on the activist side. Before I
had a disability identity, I go back to the old gay rights stuff
in the ’80s. That is where my activism started. Later I got
much more involved in the autistic rights community.
I was doing science before then—my graduate work
was originally going to be in computational intelligence.
Then I started AASPIRE, and I realized that my science
could be activism, and I have never looked back. I see
community-engaged research as a way of shifting the
system.13,14
I see it as a form of activism. I see elevating
community voices in science and ensuring ‘‘nothing about
us without us’’ in science as a part of all of that. I also think
that the pragmatic nature of services interventions could
have an impact on people’s lives today in terms of ad-
vancing justice agendas.
Mr. Williams: I think my foray into autism research was
almost an accident. I had decided on the path of going into
psychology and neuroscience when I was starting out in
college, and then as I started to define the scope of what I
wanted to do for research, I just found some of these op-
portunities in the autism research community at Yale. I was
drawn to the topic because of the personal connection, and I
really never looked back. I think it has been something that
has driven me: as with the rest of you, I definitely feel like
my work is both impactful on a scientific scale and to really
truly improve the well-being of other autistic people. And I
would like to think that by combining a scientific career with
the community priorities, that will eventually lead to a
generally increased health and well-being for many autistic
adults—and children, for that matter.
Mr. Dwyer: Thank you so much for providing those
thoughtful reflections, which I especially appreciate be-
cause I realize one’s identity is inherently a more personal
topic than most academic discussions. Zack, your last re-
flection also provides a perfect bridge into our next ques-
tion: what value do you feel autistic researchers bring to
your area of autism research?
Dr. Acevedo: As someone who uses critical pedagogy to
decenter dominant epistemologies in the classroom, it has
been rewarding to use autoethnography to document how
autistic embodiment, which Yergeau15
describes as ‘‘cun-
ning’’ while astutely reclaiming the term, can truly trans-
form a learning space and a community of learners. Autistic
‘‘motioning’’ (another of Yergeau’s terms), which I de-
scribe as a form of ‘‘neurosomatic expression,’’ interrupts
expectations of linearity and disrupts the focus on pro-
ductivism that characterizes neoliberal education (as an
exchangeable good—‘‘what can this degree buy me?’’).
This of course comes at a cost for gendered and racialized
faculty like myself.
Mr. Grapel: In general, I think that the obvious benefit that
autistic researchers have to autism research is just more ac-
tual lived experience with autism and consequently being
able to understand, instead of viewing autism from the out-
side looking in. This lived experience can, as Zack was
saying, help us figure out how the research that we are doing
can help autistic people fit more easily into and be more
helpful citizens in the communities we live in. It creates more
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4. of a chance to genuinely contribute to improving quality of
life for autistic people. How will what we are studying ac-
tually improve our lives in the ways that we see as being
valuable? Because what the general world considers impor-
tant for living life is not necessarily what we want out of life.
Dr. Nachman: My autistic identity enables me to conduct
research with a strong attention to detail and with enhanced
consideration toward alternative ways of processing and re-
laying information, as well as to empathize with participants
and colleagues through having certain lived experiences that
may resonate in a system cultivating trust. The beauty in the
autism community is its vast diversity in viewing, processing,
and relaying new knowledge about the world. Autistic re-
searchers are necessary in higher education scholarship be-
cause they provide a distinct stance on issues facing
marginalized communities, particularly in relation to helping
scholars further disentangle often singular understandings of
disability. Through more of us having a more salient role in
academia, we can interrogate neurotypical norms, offer a
platform for individuals whose perspectives have far too long
been overlooked, and provide mentorship for the next gen-
eration of autistic scholars.
Dr. Jones: I think that autistic researchers bring a variety
of strengths to any area of research, not just autism re-
search. All of the autistic researchers I know are extremely
focused on, and very passionate about, their areas of re-
search. They want to know everything there is to know
about the topic; they are committed to doing the most
comprehensive and high-quality research; they have ter-
rific attention to detail; they are perfectionists. They bring
lots and lots of strengths and value. In relation to autism
research specifically, I think they also bring a breadth of
knowledge about autism that is not found in books, and an
insight into areas that are under-researched or poorly re-
searched. They also have a genuine awareness and ac-
ceptance of the fact that every autistic person is different,
and that everyone has strengths to contribute, not just
challenges to be addressed. Unlike many nonautistic re-
searchers doing autism research, they have a commitment
to truly inclusive autism research that sees autistic people
as collaborators, not just as test subjects.
Dr. Raymaker: Everybody has made some really great
points, but I particularly agree with what Sandra just said.
I would also add that I think autistic researchers are able to
develop better and more effective research designs because
we understand the relevant access needs and community
priorities. I think that leads to better data collection, better
samples, and better research questions. Because of the in-
sights we bring with us, we are in a position to do better
research.
Mr. Williams: Like Dora, I think that most of the points that I
would have made have already been made by everyone else,
though I do think one thing that is particularly worthwhile is
the ability of autistic people to, in many cases, become the
researchers themselves rather than simply being community
partners. Yes, having lived experience is good and certainly
contributes to the research endeavor, but I actually think that
the most valuable lived experience is that which is combined
with a traditional education in a given field. That can allow us
to then question some of the norms in those fields and use new
language to actually move the fields forward toward a set of
questions and principles that are more in line with the autistic
perspective, as it were.
Dr. Brown: I really agree with what Zack just said: the idea
that autistic researchers have, much like our indigenous
colleagues, a foot in both worlds. We understand the values
and the traditions of our disciplines and we understand the
lived experience of being autistic. Living as an autistic neu-
rodivergent brain in a world dominated by neurotypical
brains is often difficult. Our intense interests, our ways of
thinking, and our behavior are often interpreted under a
neurotypical lens, which at best means that our behavior is
misinterpreted and it often leads to psychological harm.16
Thus, my autistic brain enhances the quality of my research,
because I am much less likely to misinterpret the intentions
behind the behaviors of my participants.
Dr. Acevedo: Perhaps we can all agree that autistic people
embody resistance just by virtue of existing? Staying alive in
a world that has tried to erase us from the human pool is
truly revolutionary. That is precisely why our role is in-
valuable in reclaiming and actualizing our own stories so that
we may decenter the epistemic monopoly that nonautistic
professionals have historically held over our embodiminds17
experiences.
Mr. Dwyer: Thank you all for describing those numerous
different ways in which our presence could enhance the
field of autism research. Sara, your last comment about
our survival in a world dominated by nonautistic people
also provides a perfect bridge into our next question: do
you think that there are tensions or conflicting expecta-
tions and goals that can particularly affect autistic re-
searchers, especially given that the autism research field
has been predominantly shaped and inhabited by non-
autistic researchers?
Dr. Acevedo: I am often asked for resources about—and I
quote—‘‘ASD’’ in various spaces. This is of course unpaid
labor that comes with added microaggressions that begin, but
do not end, with wording and terminology choices. My re-
sponses, depending on context and on how comfortable or
safe I find myself in those situations, often touch on our
community’s language uses and choices. I make it a point to
explain that generally, although not always, neurodivergent
activists and scholars tend to refrain from using the language
of disorder. It does not really align with our views, ideologies,
or cultural approaches to neurodiversity, which is considered
an integral part of the human experience. As a bonus, my
comments always include a list of sources to encourage in-
dependent research that does not bank on the intellectual and
affective labor of an oppressed group. I guide people to
survey literature coming from either critical autism studies or
critical disability studies, if they wish to truly learn from our
own process of knowledge production and overall cultural
kinship systems. Mind you, the topic of autism, theorized by
autistic scholars—which is fairly new due to the monopoly of
the medical and therapeutic establishment over our lived
experiences and ways of knowing.
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5. Mr. Dwyer: Thank you. I suspect that many people here
have similar experiences of being asked to provide our in-
sights as additional unpaid labor. I certainly have, and yes,
I am seeing several of our panelists nodding in agreement.
Mr. Williams: As someone who primarily works in the
biomedical field and in a clinical program, I think I do en-
counter a lot of the medical model, and I am probably a bit
more tolerant of it than many of autistic people. I do think
generally that it is very interesting to see how researchers
over the past several years who have listened to the social
justice movements of autistic people have tried to incorporate
neurodiversity principles into what is still relatively a medi-
cal model-heavy field. Indeed, I really think that we are in a
point of transition right now in many of the more psycho-
logical brain sciences. On the one hand, many people are still
engaged in traditional research, that is, ‘‘Let’s look at cause,
prevention, cure,’’ but I also think many more people have
now shifted toward asking, ‘‘Okay, what are the actual out-
comes that matter?’’ developmental milestones, quality of
life, etc. In some ways the tensions between these two dif-
ferent research agendas seem to reflect differences in the
goals of many younger early career professionals versus the
goals of older established professionals.
Mr. Grapel: I agree with a lot of what Zack said. I am
definitely noticing much more of a shift away from a cure
and more toward effective treatment. For example, one
thing that I really love about my laboratory is that I have not
personally experienced a lot of tension in terms of cure
versus where we practically go from here, because I feel like
many people are starting to understand that the idea of a cure
is problematic. What would ‘‘cure’’ actually mean? What
are we curing? So the goal is not necessarily about trying to
get rid of the autism. It is about figuring out what things
about autism are actually problematic for executive func-
tioning and daily living, and how to train and teach the skills
necessary to live without sacrificing the things that make
your autism an advantage.
I will also say, and this might be a slightly unpopular
opinion: I have never been a huge fan of the way that some
people tend to focus on identity and specific language. I can
see its value in terms of people and how they view themselves
and how they talk to each other, but as an autistic person in a
research laboratory, there have been occasions where I have
been asked how I feel about a certain language that is used,
like person first versus identity first versus all the other dif-
ferent ways we could write about autism in the article. Every
time that question comes up, it kind of bugs me because I get
that we are trying to be respectful, but it seems like it is
detracting from the research we could be doing to actually
improve people’s lives. It feels like that kind of stuff can
come later. But I do not know. I am sure that there are people
who disagree with me.
Mr. Williams: Jordan, I tend to feel the same way. I have
definitely seen some people dismiss entire articles because of
their use of language rather than their scientific merit, and
that bothers me.
Dr. Acevedo: My view is that language is a technology of
power that works to create compliance and homogeneity.
Everyday language use is not exempt from the logic of nor-
mative social arrangements built on multiple exclusions.
Discourses that sustain said arrangements manifest through
practices and policies that affect our lives in very tangible
ways. I am very interested in challenging the idea that lan-
guage is not as important an issue to address.
Mr. Dwyer: I think it is definitely okay for us to disagree
and have friendly controversy and debates between ideas.
Dr. Brown: I agree! There are important points on both sides.
Dr. Acevedo: Yes, absolutely! And the fact that we do not
agree about everything reflects our plurality as autistic people
and as researchers.
Mr. Grapel: I would not say that language is not important.
I would just say it is not the most important thing, especially
when we are talking about research that can affect people’s
lives.
Dr. Acevedo: Materially speaking, language affects people’s
lives, though. To clarify, I did not mean to suggest you said it
does not affect people’s lives, but rather that it is a common
argument that people express by saying we have ‘‘bigger fish
to fry,’’ and I simply disagree with the idea that language
orbits outside other systems of oppression.
Mr. Grapel: Yes, but I would argue that effective research
has a larger impact in people’s lives, and I would personally
rather see an article with an outdated term make it to pub-
lication than see an article be killed because of the language
when it has got strong merit and can help people right now.
I have seen articles stalled for that very reason and it is
infuriating to me.
Dr. Acevedo: I respectfully agree to disagree.
Mr. Grapel: Agreed.
Dr. Nachman: I will also follow-up on what Jordan said.
Personally, I tend to not get as offended if someone uses
person-first or identity-first language to describe me, but I
also believe it is important to recognize that there are many
nuance and other factors playing into how other individuals
want to be described. In the work that many of my colleagues
and I do, I think it is important for us to try to position the
individual in the autism community to directly share, in the
research study, how they would like to be identified, so we
can use their wording. Crucially, this includes trying to erase
deficit-based framing of autism. It goes without saying that
everybody who is part of this panel is an advocate for wanting
to discuss autism in a strengths-based format, and I would
also add we have to recognize that everything is contextu-
alized. Much like any identity, any experience, or any op-
portunity, there are both challenges and opportunities, and I
think looking at this holistically is extremely important to
illustrate the complexities and true richness of being a
member of the autism community.
Dr. Jones: I think there are dozens of tensions and conflicts,
but due to time, I will just mention three.
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6. First, the primacy of nonautistic researchers in the minds of
universities and professional organizations can make it very
difficult for autistic researchers to secure funding for research
that is not aimed at treating or curing autism, but rather at
addressing societal and environmental barriers.
Second, I think that many researchers experience frustra-
tion working with colleagues who have been trained by the
system to use language and perspectives that we might find
offensive, and that creates this constant conflict—and others
have touched on this—between: Do we openly challenge
them, which a lot of the autistic community wants us to do,
but which could risk ending the collaboration? Or do we
accept where they are coming from and slowly work to ed-
ucate them, which leaves us quite open to criticism from
others in our community that we are allowing the problematic
terminology and perspectives to continue? I think that is a
real conflict, and certainly one I experience.
But for me, perhaps the most significant and disturbing of
the conflicts within our community is that I see many autistic
people and families of autistic people who are deterred from
asking questions or participating in groups or activities be-
cause they are attacked for using the wrong terminology or
expressing a nonmajority perspective. And that prevents
them from interacting. I think we already face so many
challenges from those who do not have any lived experience
of autism without battling each other.
Dr. Raymaker: Everybody said such important things that I
am just going to respond to just a couple of thoughts that you
all made me think.
First, getting back to what Sara said about our embodied
presence, and how our being here can help break down some
of these ableist structures—even the things that we have to do
with the IRB (institutional review board) to include autistic
collaborators butt up against ableist systems—the fact that
we exist and that we have these needs is going to make the
rest of the field change to accommodate us and make room for
us for what we are doing. That makes this tension between us
and the institutions of academia a good one, with potential for
positive change. I am not sure whether I could say anything
here better than Sara, but I very much agree with that.
I also wanted to return to the conversation about language.
A decade ago, the ARC refused to give our recruitment flyers
out because we had used identity-first language that the au-
tistic community wanted, so we neutralized all of our lan-
guage for a while—person on the autism spectrum. But our
work, the science, gets disseminated back out into the autistic
and broader communities, so although it might not seem like
making concessions in one place matters very much, if we
actually want to make change, it matters. I think that we have
a role in making social justice happen, so you cannot draw a
clear line between where the science ends and where its
impact on society begins.
Dr. Brown: I agree with many of the points that have been
made so far. I often feel a great deal of anxiety about trying to
ethically balance the needs of the autistic individual and
autistics as a group; and the needs of parents, families, edu-
cators, clinicians, and the wider community; while also
needing to meet the rules, regulations and financial con-
straints of policymakers, funding agencies, and governmental
organizations. Another tension that has been quite difficult
for me to navigate in academia is the need for self-promotion
and having a public persona. I am quite introverted and I have
a great deal of social anxiety because I was bullied
throughout high school for being different. As a result, in-
tense flashes of shame often crash through my nervous sys-
tem whenever I notice that my behavior might be interpreted
as odd, rude, or socially naı̈ve. To cope, I try to mask my
differences and appear just like everyone else. The use of
compensation and masking strategies, also known as
camouflaging, is often used by autistic people to blend into
their social surroundings by mimicking the behavior of oth-
ers.18–20
However, it is incredibly draining to continually
suppress obvious autistic traits and mannerisms (like fidget-
ing, pacing, or stimming) or to pretend that everything is fine
when the sensory environment is impossible to tolerate.
Mr. Williams: One point that I wanted to bring back that I
think is a very very important one is that Sandra was talking
about the sort of infighting in the autistic community and
even autism communities in general. There are many people
in these communities with very different perspectives and
very different lived experiences who all get together and for
the most part argue about things via the Internet. And I think
that in many cases, the animosity that comes between these
different factions of people with varying opinions can often
make the autistic spaces or these autism-focused spaces
somewhat hostile. And that can be problematic. I do not know
that this really extends to research, just because I think that
many folks in academia have a level of professional decorum
that has been instilled in them: you know, if you are going to
ask a snarky question, you do it as a comment after someone’s
talk. But I think that generally, nevertheless, there are still
kind of these undertones of, ‘‘Oh, I dislike this person at their
base level, and this infuriates me, and I want to destroy their
work’’ underneath a lot of disagreement.
Dr. Raymaker: I agree with the concerns about internal in-
fighting, but there is another tension related to the community
that I feel all the time, which is a need to do right by the
community. I have very strong feelings around needing my
research to actually do right by my own community. This can
sometimes make me terrified, actually: I worry that if I mess
something up, I am betraying what I care about and the
people I care about. I think that researchers who are not also
members of the community do not feel that as much. The
intensity and impact of these feelings are another important
dimension of community-to-researcher tension that I feel.21
Dr. Acevedo: I totally agree with you, Dora, and I just want
to piggyback on what Zack was saying before. I completely
agree that there is a tendency toward hostility in online
activist spaces to the point that I have left these places en-
tirely, and I know of many others who have done the same;
gatekeeping is certainly an issue and it happened to me
personally when I first joined what I thought/hoped would
be community-building spaces. I do not mean to say there
should be no room to discuss across different perspectives
and experiences because those are necessary to cultivate
plurality within our communities. What I encountered often,
however, were plenty of interactions based on ad hominem
attacks against people whose views differed from more
commonly held views or shared stances. Some argue that
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7. interactions of this nature are fueled by trauma and, although I
certainly agree with that, I neither condone perpetuating per-
sonal trauma nor thrive in that type of online culture. The fact
is that our community deals with so much external pressure
already that the infighting is simply detrimental to our com-
mon goals and political agendas. Overall, there is certainly a
need for understanding and recognizing that we are plural and
that we espouse multiple and often conflicting views, but I do
not think that those differences should be weaponized within
our communities and against each other.
Mr. Grapel: I just want to very quickly piggyback on what
Sara was saying to point out, yes, there is a lot of diversity in
the group in terms of both online forums and reality in the real
world, and I feel like it is important that we also mention that
we are all coming from a place of privilege within our own
community, insofar as we are able to even be here working in
research and able to actually communicate effectively how
we feel. That is, frankly, a luxury that not everyone with
autism has, and I think it is really important that when we do
talk about the society and the community as a whole, we
remember that there is a whole subset of the community that
cannot really, as of yet, speak for themselves. I do feel that we
have a bit of an obligation to those people to try and help to
get them what they need to become their own self-advocates.
Dr. Jones: I want to jump back to the point Dora made earlier
about IRBs. For me, one of the biggest conflicts or tensions I
find is between our desire to do studies that are informed by
authentic autistic voices, and an IRB’s perspective is that this
is a vulnerable group that we have to protect. There is a
tension there because it can be so hard to get a study through
an IRB that is about actually talking to people. It seems to be
easier if you want to put electrodes on their heads. But if you
want to actually have a conversation with them, talk about
their experience, you risk feedback like: ‘‘Oh, this is a very
vulnerable group. I don’t think you should do that. I think
you should write a participant information sheet that’s writ-
ten for a two-year-old, because otherwise they won’t under-
stand it.’’ And I think that is a tension that needs to be
resolved, so that our voices—all of our voices—can be heard.
We need to make sure autistic people are able to actively
participate in research: that we are not protected by IRBs so
much that we are actually silenced.
Dr. Acevedo: That is so real, Sandra. It happened to me with
my dissertation, which was a collaborative emancipatory
research-based study.
Mr. Dwyer: As somebody who sometimes puts electrodes on
people’s heads, yes! I agree there is truth to what you say,
Sandra. And that important point, along with all the
thoughtful insights brought up by the panelists, emphasizes
that there are many tensions and issues in our fields we need
to address. This leads to our next set of questions: What do
you want your field to look like 20 years from now? What
things would you like to be different? What needs to happen
for your vision to become a reality? Are some of these
changes already occurring?
Dr. Acevedo: Institutional and structural changes and re-
ducing ableism in academic settings: these two are inevitably
intertwined. Performative diversity under neoliberalism:
there is a lot of virtue signaling and very little infrastructural
and cultural support for the ‘‘diverse’’ faculty that are
brought on as a sign of good will and benevolence (charity
model, anyone?). This illusion of plurality, which is actually
used to fulfill a ‘‘diversity quota,’’ is not only culturally di-
visive, but also materially precarious. I want to crush the idea
of ‘‘diversifying’’ the workspace or the research communi-
ty—we are already diverse, so this is a neoliberal ruse to keep
us distracted from the processes of sanitation and exclusion
that actually come before this focus on what Mitchell and
Snyder call ‘‘inclusionism.’’22
I am a disability justice ac-
tivist and the way in which QTBIPOC [Queer, Trans, Black,
Indigenous People of Color] activists have reimagined the
term and the practice of access is truly an act love as Alice
Wong, Sandy Ho, and Mia Mingus have explained.23
Mr. Williams: I think one thing that I would really love to
see is the space being made for autistic people to come to the
table even if they do not have academic credentials on equal
footing with the researchers. I think that people who are doing
community-based participatory research such as Dora et al.
are obviously leading the way in this regard, but it is still very
much a niche thing within autistic research. I think it would
be excellent if funders, especially, would go out of their way
to encourage or perhaps even require people to simply engage
in the community with every sort of project that they do: at
the very least to simply survey people and ask whether or not
the goals of the project itself are even important to them. That
could be very useful. And of course, there is always this
suggestion that, oh yes, basic science may lead to things
down the line that you do not yet know or think are important,
and that has merit as well. But overall, I do think that in many
cases the consideration of community priorities as research
priorities is becoming more standard for autism researchers,
and I hope that the field continues to do that over the next 10
to 15 years or longer.
Mr. Grapel: I really resonate with what Sara said, and I want
to expand on it. I think she really hit the nail on the head, that
this neoliberal idea of ‘‘more diversity equals more progress’’
is really this self-defeating problem. If we really want more
diversity in the field of autism research, if we really want
more autistic people in the field, then what we need to do is,
as a community, have better autism research. Better autism
research will lead to better understanding of autism, better
treatment of the parts that actually do make it difficult to
succeed, and a better understanding of which of those things
are socially constructed and thus not areas in which we
should be trying to change autistic people. That will, in and of
itself, allow for more autistic people to become autism re-
searchers. Ultimately, in response to, ‘‘what do I want to see
from the field,’’ I most importantly want to see actual prog-
ress for autistic people autism, and I think that to get there, we
need more consensus among researchers on what we are
actually trying to do. We spend so much time arguing about
what things mean and politicizing everything, and it makes it
hard to just agree on what we are trying to do—which is how
we could figure out what works.
Dr. Jones: I would like to see a landscape where all autism
research includes collaboration with autistic researchers and
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8. autistic communities. In my ideal world of the future, I
would never again read a journal article written by an autism
‘‘expert’’ that reports on a research study that was no benefit
to autistic people and potentially harmful for autistic people.
What I would not like to see, but seems to be very common
at the moment, is token inclusion of autistic people, as Sara
mentioned. It is not about ticking a box that there is an
autistic person on the team. It is about recognizing that
autistic people bring unique strengths and insights to the
research, whether that is research on autism or research on
aerodynamics or butterflies. We actually bring things be-
yond just ticking a box.
Dr. Raymaker: I really resonate with what Sara said, and I
want to give an example. I was having a discussion with a
colleague just the other day about this: about the structural
changes that are necessary. We were talking about compre-
hensive examinations as an inherently ableist structure if
what you honestly want to get at is: ‘‘Can this person dem-
onstrate a deep and intensive level of competence?’’ Why is
the comprehensive examination the only way to do that?
Cannot we offer multiple ways of assessing competence? For
example, skills demonstrations. And so when I look to the
future, I would like to see structural changes like that
throughout the system, where we start thinking about: ‘‘How
is what we’re doing making assumptions about a particular
way of being, instead of getting at what we actually claim to
care about?’’
And then the other thing that I want to see in 20 years is
more of us! An exponential increase in the number of autistic
autism researchers in all fields.
Mr. Williams: More than just increasing the number of au-
tistic autism researchers, I want to see more autistic people
wanting to be autism researchers, clinicians, and service
providers. These are the career paths with the most direct
impact on the lives of autistic people, and if autistic people do
not feel comfortable or welcome working in these areas, there
will forever be a significant disconnect between research,
clinical practice, and the goals of the autistic community. The
field of autism research has become a lot more welcoming to
autistic people over the past few years, but there is definitely a
long way to go to bridge the gap between researchers and the
general autistic activism community.
Mr. Dwyer: I greatly appreciate Dora’s point about in-
flexible requirements that are not tied to what we really
ought to care about. Building off what Zack says, I also feel
like there is some pressure right now for autistic scholars to
go into autism research because in some ways it is easier to
be ‘‘out’’ here than in other fields. So I would hope people
can want to be either autism researchers or researchers in
another field.
Dr. Brown: I agree with the points that many of my col-
leagues have made, especially Dora’s. I would like to see
more autistic researchers leading studies intending to study
some aspect of autism. And like many of us, I would also like
to see more research aimed at improving the overall well-
being of autistic people and their families. Increasing the
number of autistic researchers would mean that more autistic
adults would be directly involved in the production of
knowledge about autism, knowledge that is about them,7
which would, in turn, lead to the use of less harmful and
stigmatizing discourse and language about autism. The
production and dissemination of more accurate knowledge
about such a misunderstood group will help change the
current narrative of tragedy, pity, and fear to a less harmful
and stigmatizing one that showcases autistic strengths and
potential. Indeed, another big difference is that there would
be a larger focus on these strength-based approaches. To
take education as an example, strength-based education
begins with educators discovering what their students do
best, and then helping their students leverage personal
strengths while learning new or difficult things, so that their
students ‘‘can reach previously unattained levels of personal
excellence.’’24
This strength-based approach is a paradigm
shift; it is a movement away from a deficit-based approach
and it focuses on identification of weaknesses and remedi-
ation of deficits.25
Empowering autistic researchers and the
broader autistic community to direct autism research en-
sures that the resulting research will be grounded in a
strength-based approach, even when the focus of the re-
search is the challenges associated with autism.25
Dr. Nachman: What more can I say that my colleagues have
not said already? I think that I would further push on the
point of representation mattering. We need to bring inter-
sectional identities to the forefront, and not just from a to-
kenistic standpoint but rather from a fully contextualized
perspective of the members of the autism community that
encompass our world. I hope that goes without saying, but it
is certainly important. We need to value the diversity of
expertise and knowledge found throughout the autism
community. There continues to be some pigeonholing and
stereotyping in terms of what individuals’ skill sets and
strengths are, and I think we need to recognize that, of
course as with any other community, strengths are multi-
faceted, very rich, and often very nuanced.
What do I think needs to happen, in terms of our envi-
ronment having a greater autistic researcher presence? I
think in terms of my field of higher education specifically,
we need our colleges and universities to really be trans-
formed to truly value autistic perspectives. My recom-
mendations for implementing structural changes really
stem from the research that I and my colleagues work on:
everything from having more inclusive teaching strategies
embedded in curriculums in the classroom that enable au-
tistic students to showcase their strengths (and, like my
colleagues here today, across many different disciplines),
to really offering campus-wide seminars and panels fea-
turing autistic students, who we are learning from and with,
as opposed to talking to and communicating to the com-
munity. I feel like increasing our collective visibility and
supporting strength-based programming better position
autistic students to attain their goals. It even makes us more
likely to explore graduate school and to pursue similar work
to that I and my colleagues here today engage in. If I were to
quote a favorite Disney song, ‘‘There’s a great, big, beau-
tiful tomorrow just a dream away,’’ and I feel like we are
among the trailblazers and our contemporaries can help
shape that vision.
Mr. Grapel: Was that from Carousel of Progress?
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9. Dr. Nachman: Sure was, Jordan!
Dr. Jones: What needs to happen: I think academia needs to
be a lot more supportive of autistic people. That means being
willing to make the environmental, structural, and social
changes that enable us to survive and thrive in the university
environment. I can see some of these changes coming, but not
at the scale or speed we need them to. There is a lot that our
nonautistic colleagues can do to support us, but only if we
actually educate them on what these things are: simple things
such as putting dimmer switches on lights; limiting the
number and duration of meetings; not having meetings in
noisy cafés; understanding that we are not being rude or
unfriendly if we decline to attend after-work functions;
making it easier for us to participate in meetings by accepting
that we might need to stim or to fidget, that we might not want
to make eye contact, and that we might need to turn the video
off during online meetings. I think there is a lot. I think there
is also an onus on senior researchers in the field, though, to
drive those changes. It is a lot easier to be brave and vocal
when you have tenure and you are at a certain point in your
career. And I think that autistic researchers should be men-
toring and supporting junior autistic researchers and research
students and those who aspire to become autistic researchers.
Mr. Grapel: Yes, Sandra! On that same note, those obliga-
tory meet ups during the interview process that they say are
optional but that we all know are not.
Mr. Dwyer: I think Sandra’s answer really resonated with
everyone, judging from how it was accompanied by strong
nonverbal signs of agreement—vigorous head nodding—
from many of us. Thank you so much Sandra and everyone
else for drawing attention to so many areas where our fields
have a very real opportunity to improve.
We do have one final question, which I am afraid may fall
into the perennial theme of, ‘‘You are the autistic voice and
we are therefore imposing on your time and energy by de-
manding that you should share your insights with the non-
autistic people.’’ Sorry in advance about that, but here is the
question: what would you most like nonautistic autism re-
searchers to better understand about autism?
Dr. Acevedo: I teach students in the applied professions, and
it is pretty challenging to introduce critical disability study
theories and methods to students who have spent several
years learning about disability (without disabled people)
from a deficit or biomedical perspective. I do observe in-
credibly rewarding shifts in perspective, but again it is evi-
dent that students face plenty of personal and professional
challenges when first encountering critical disability studies
and critical autism study perspectives that fundamentally
counter their very core of their fields. There is this fear, I
think, of relinquishing the idea that not all efforts framed as
‘‘inclusive’’ are actually beneficial or just and that in many
cases they are harmful. They might feel concerned with the
thought that to bring a critical look into their field is some
form of ‘‘betrayal’’ while others might experience anxiety as
they learn that something (a practice/ideology) that they be-
lieve in so passionately carries a deep history of harm against
disabled people. Ultimately, my hope is that they experience
some paradigmatic shifts as they perceive dialoguing with us
(disabled educators and peers) in terms of acceptance and
epistemic expansion, rather than a threat to their sense of
personal and professional identity.
Mr. Williams: I really do have to agree with what Sara said,
and I also think that in general, beyond just listening and
dialoguing with autistic people, people need to treat us as
peers and as equals. We do not have to be right, and we do not
have to have the final word on everything related to autism;
we just have to have a seat at the table. In fact, instead of
nonautistic researchers deferring to my point of view because
I am autistic, I want to be challenged. I want my ideas to be
held to the same standard of academic rigor as everyone
else’s, and if people disagree with me, I hope they feel
comfortable doing so. I know that my ideas are not going to
be right all the time, and it is most important to me that these
ideas become part of the larger discourse of autism research.
I feel that I have been able to contribute in this way pretty
well so far, but I think that it is a lot harder for many other
neurodivergent people. I hope that we as a field can work to
remedy this and ensure that there are many more seats at the
table for autistic people in the future.
Dr. Acevedo: I want us to build the table.
Dr. Raymaker: The shape of the table needs to change too.
Maybe instead of a table, a field of flowers?
Mr. Grapel: One thing I would like nonautistic researchers
to learn is that autistic adults exist, and we need to have more
studies wherein we look at their experience and everything
that happens after graduation. I am really proud of Duke,
because they are already getting on this, but there are so few
studies on outcomes; it is all about early development, which
is very important, but I think we need to broaden where we
look. In the same way, we really need to broaden where we
look for autistic research, because it really tends to be our
group, our subset of verbally fluent people without intellec-
tual disabilities, because it is easier to collect data from them.
All that means we are missing a huge big picture, and I think I
would like my nonautistic peers to get to figuring out how we
are going to account for that and actually learn about the
entire population.
Dr. Jones: When my son was in high school, he wrote a book
of short stories, and the title of that book sums up everything
that I want nonautistic autism researchers to understand. The
title of his book was Don’t Fix Me: I’m Not Broken.26
Dr. Nachman: I am glad to be living in a space where there
are richer conversations about autism in the higher education
research pool that I occupy; it is relatively novel. For me, it
encourages me to see more scholarship on autism in higher
education. I work closely with people—my colleagues and
coauthors—many of whom are not autistic, and what I value
is openness to listening, learning, and being humble, and the
recognition that we are in a constant process of learning and
unlearning things. Even as a member of the autism commu-
nity, my conceptualizations continually change, so I think
what I would encourage nonautistic autism researchers to do
is to actively engage with members of the autism community
and also to really interrogate their own institutions. They
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10. could use the privileges and roles that they hold to be agents
of change to further support the aspirations and potential of
autistic researchers.
Dr. Brown: I would like nonautistic researchers to under-
stand that my subjective experience is real. Gaslighting oc-
curs when you tell me that my reaction is out of proportion to
the event. But in that moment—given how my brain and my
body and my mind are responding to the stimuli in my
environment—given my history, my trauma, and my neuro-
logical differences—in that moment, my reaction is perfectly
in line with my subjective reality. So, if you truly want to
help, then teach me how to find the calm in the eye of my
chaos while fully acknowledging all of the causes beyond my
control that put me there.
Mr. Dwyer: I wish I could yell what Heather just said at my
middle school teachers! That is a powerful final thought to
end our discussion.
Thank you so much everybody for contributing such rich,
actionable, penetrating, and nuanced insights in today’s
discussion. I think this roundtable will be very valuable to
the field of autism research, so I deeply appreciate your time
and your perspectives.
Mr. Dwyer: To summarize some of what we have heard in
this discussion, we began by discussing identity. You all
clearly expressed that your identities—autism and sometimes
other intersectional identities—give you a personal connec-
tion to your research. You rejected the idea that this con-
nection is a source of bias, pointing out that everyone has
biases and that personal connections to research can be of
value both for scholarship and activism.
Indeed, you described numerous different ways in which
autistic autism researchers can enhance the quality of autism
research:
Although you acknowledged the diversity of autistic
people’s experiences and the privileges we enjoy as
researchers, you also pointed out that autistic autism
researchers are uniquely well positioned to combine
experiential knowledge with academic knowledge—
and, I would add, with knowledge of frameworks
autistic people in the community use to understand
autism, such as the concept of autistic burnout that
Dora brought into academia27
—in ways that can lead
to critical insights.
You pointed out being autistic can give us insight into
important, yet neglected domains, such as topics
relevant to autistic quality of life. Relatedly, you
pointed out that autistic researchers are well positioned
to challenge widespread harmful misunderstandings
of autistic people.
You also noted that our insights as autistic people can help
us understand how autistic participants will engage with
research studies, allowing us to develop more accessible,
relevant, and methodologically sound projects.
Some of you commented that being autistic can help
us connect with autistic people in the community.
Our empathy and shared autistic identity can help us
foster trust and build collaborations with community
partners.
Moreover, you noted many autistic people can have
important strengths that can be useful in research
generally: our attention to detail and our passionate
focus on our interests.
At the same time, you noted that our presence in the
research field could help challenge the competitive
productivity-oriented culture of academia. This
could benefit many scholars, including but not limited
to neurodivergent, gendered, and racialized academics.
Furthermore, you drew attention to numerous tensions and
conflicts that we face as autistic autism researchers:
You pointed out we can feel a deep sense of obligation
and responsibility toward the needs of the autism
community, which can put us in the difficult position
of being torn between following community pref-
erences, maintaining collegial and collaborative re-
lations with other autism researchers, and adhering
to the requirements of institutions such as funders.
You also drew attention to conflicts, hostility, and de-
mands for conformity within the community, espe-
cially online, which can make it difficult or dangerous to
engage with the online community as we would like to.
Although you embraced the diversity and plurality of the
autism world and expressed the importance of hearing
from marginalized populations, you felt the conflicts and
hostility that so often pervade our communities prevent
us from working together on shared goals.
These community tensions relate to language and ter-
minology, where some of you disagreed in a way that
emphasizes the diversity of autistic perspectives. On the
one hand, some of you pointed out that terminology
conflicts can distract us from other important issues
relevant to quality of life in autism. On the other hand,
some of you emphasized that language and identity are
important and related to power and oppression.
Moreover, many of you commented on tensions be-
tween research agendas grounded in the medical model
and those grounded in the neurodiversity approach and
the practical needs of autistic people. Although you felt
we are gradually seeing more research of the latter
variety, you pointed out that powerful forces, such as
funding mechanisms and senior researchers, often
favor medical model-aligned research.
You also drew attention to ways in which inflexible
institutions and practices, such as IRBs and qualifying
examinations, can impose barriers that restrict autistic
involvement in academia. (Isn’t it ironic how inflexible
neurotypical society can be, despite the traditional focus
on autistic inflexibility?) Furthermore, you warned that
pressures to self-promote can lead neurodivergent
academics to camouflage in exhausting and potentially
harmful ways. On a more positive note, you also pointed
out that the involvement of autistic people in academia
can help us confront these barriers and challenges.
Indeed, you articulated attractive and compelling visions
of ways in which the autism field can improve and address
contemporary tensions and challenges. You suggested:
Expanding involvement of autistic people—including
those with intersectional identities—in autism re-
search as both scholars and as community partners.
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11. You suggested funding incentives could encourage this
involvement. Although you emphasized that such in-
volvement must be meaningful—it must not be perfor-
mative ticking of diversity checkboxes—you described
how meaningful involvement could challenge widespread
misunderstandings of and stereotypes toward autistic
people.
Making autism research more strengths based and
better aligned with community needs and priorities.
This could help bridge gaps between community
members and researchers, increasing community trust
and confidence in research.
Reforming academia to make institutions and practices
more inclusive, such as using more inclusive teaching
strategies, finding alternatives to qualifying examinations,
considering sensory accessibility, and generally taking a
more flexible and empathetic approach. You said that se-
nior faculty in positions of power have a responsibility to
drive these changes. You also emphasized the importance
of providing opportunities for campus communities to hear
the perspectives and insights of autistic people.
In that vein, you provided some very important insights
and advice for readers who want to better understand autism:
First, to be open and receptive to learning. You said it
is important for people to be open to criticizing tradi-
tional or dominant theories and institutions in their
fields. This includes being willing to acknowledge harm.
To treat us as equals and peers, who might or might
not be correct about something, but whose opinions and
insights deserve respect and consideration.
To recognize the full diversity of autism, including
understudied and marginalized populations such as
autistic adults, those with intersectional identities,
those with intellectual disabilities, and non- and mini-
mally speaking individuals.
To have empathy for and validate our subjective
experiences, especially when our neurodivergence
and past traumatic experiences lead us to become
overwhelmed.
To refrain from assuming we need to be fixed.
Authorship Confirmation Statement
P.D. and D.M.R. planned the roundtable. All authors
participated in the roundtable discussion. All authors edited
and approved the final manuscript. The content is solely the
responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily rep-
resent the official views of any of the funders.
Acknowledgments
We thank the Autism in Adulthood editorial board for se-
lecting this topic, and we are especially grateful to Teal
Benevides, Steven Kapp, Brenna Maddox, and Anna Urba-
nowicz for their help suggesting potential discussants and
preparing roundtable questions. We also particularly thank
Christina Nicolaidis for her valuable advice and support with
logistics and preparations for the roundtable.
Author Disclosure Statement
Z.J.W. has received consulting fees from Roche. He is also
a family partner of the Autism Speaks Autism Care Network
Vanderbilt site. Z.J.W., H.M.B., and P.D. are members of the
Autistic Researcher Review Board of the Autism Interven-
tion Research Network on Physical Health (AIR-P).
Funding Information
Z.J.W’s. time was supported, in part, by the National In-
stitute of General Medical Sciences (T32-GM007347), the
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication
Disorders (F30-DC019510), and the Nancy Lurie Marks
Family Foundation. D.M.R.’s time was supported, in part, by
the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences,
National Institutes of Health (KL2TR002370).
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Address correspondence to:
Patrick Dwyer, MA
Center for Mind and Brain
University of California at Davis
267 Cousteau PI
Davis, CA 95618
USA
Email: patricksrdwyer@gmail.com
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