Sora wrote:
Urgh, I don't understand the levels.
What if your autism makes you react in a way not covered by these sentences? Anyone have an idea about that?
I'm spontaneously thinking of stuff such as loss of skills, different levels of initiation of interaction and reaction to interaction depending on availability of abilities as well as such factors as the target group of said interaction as well as simply varying levels of autistic symptoms depending on environment and possibly other unknown factors.
I guess with this new DSM-V, they'll just play "add the symptoms", stack those aspects of one's autism to determine in what way someone's impaired in their functioning until they come to a level of 'severity'. What we have now with the DSM-IV is a very horizontal autistic spectrum, with severity being relevant for a whole scala of ASDs under the same umbrella. What we get in the DSM-V is a more vertical thing, not even truly a 'spectrum' as there's only one name, 'autistic disorder'. The main thing that's going to distinguish one autistic person from the other IS severity in this scenario.
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