Nonverbal Learning Disorder- On the spectrum or not?

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Sethno
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24 Nov 2014, 8:52 pm

I've read that in the States, it's not counted as on the spectrum (in particular after the introduction of the evil "IV"... you know what I mean), but elsewhere (such as in Canada) it IS counted as on the spectrum.

Can anyone address this with facts and not guesses or personal feelings?


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nca14
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25 Nov 2014, 10:45 am

I do not know what is the evil "IV" :)

I am also very interested in the case of "NLD". In USA there is DSM-V, which makes the criteria of ASD even more strict than DSM-IV. There is no NVLD in DSM-V (it is good news, because the term is misleading - it suggests that it is a learning disorder (scholastic problem)).

I have many personal thoughts about NVLD. It is my "obsession", I suppose, that I would be diagnosed with NVLD in North America and not with ASD/PDD, but in Poland I received AS diagnosis.



Sethno
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28 Feb 2015, 12:39 am

Does anyone else know much about this?


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Fitzi
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28 Feb 2015, 1:24 am

This is what I know (which isn't all that much). NVLD is not a real diagnosis in the USA, because it is not in the DSM-V. However, SCD (Social Communication Disorder) is, which seems to be just another way of saying what some others are calling NVLD. It is diagnosed when someone has the social and pragmatic speech issues of someone on the spectrum, but without the repetitive behavior and restrictive interests. In the past, someone might receive a PDD-NOS diagnosis for this, but now it is not considered to be on the spectrum. The criteria to be diagnosed as on the spectrum seem to be a lot more rigid now.



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28 Feb 2015, 9:46 am

Fitzi wrote:
This is what I know (which isn't all that much). NVLD is not a real diagnosis in the USA, because it is not in the DSM-V. However, SCD (Social Communication Disorder) is, which seems to be just another way of saying what some others are calling NVLD. It is diagnosed when someone has the social and pragmatic speech issues of someone on the spectrum, but without the repetitive behavior and restrictive interests. In the past, someone might receive a PDD-NOS diagnosis for this, but now it is not considered to be on the spectrum. The criteria to be diagnosed as on the spectrum seem to be a lot more rigid now.



I though NVLD had RRRBs too? And yes PDD a-NOSA is on the spectrum if you had that diagnosis you were relabeled autism spectrum disoder under the DsM v


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Fitzi
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28 Feb 2015, 10:16 am

ASdogGeek wrote:
Fitzi wrote:
This is what I know (which isn't all that much). NVLD is not a real diagnosis in the USA, because it is not in the DSM-V. However, SCD (Social Communication Disorder) is, which seems to be just another way of saying what some others are calling NVLD. It is diagnosed when someone has the social and pragmatic speech issues of someone on the spectrum, but without the repetitive behavior and restrictive interests. In the past, someone might receive a PDD-NOS diagnosis for this, but now it is not considered to be on the spectrum. The criteria to be diagnosed as on the spectrum seem to be a lot more rigid now.



I though NVLD had RRRBs too? And yes PDD a-NOSA is on the spectrum if you had that diagnosis you were relabeled autism spectrum disoder under the DsM v


Yes, I know PDD- NOS is on the spectrum. I was saying that, in the past, someone might have received a PDD-NOS diagnosis for what they are now diagnosing as SCD, and SCD is not considered a spectrum disorder. So, this is why I said the criteria for the diagnosis is more rigid now.

I don't know what RRRBs is. I just know that NVLD is not a diagnosis here, but I believe SCD is the closest we have in the US.



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28 Feb 2015, 10:41 am

Fitzi wrote:
ASdogGeek wrote:
Fitzi wrote:
This is what I know (which isn't all that much). NVLD is not a real diagnosis in the USA, because it is not in the DSM-V. However, SCD (Social Communication Disorder) is, which seems to be just another way of saying what some others are calling NVLD. It is diagnosed when someone has the social and pragmatic speech issues of someone on the spectrum, but without the repetitive behavior and restrictive interests. In the past, someone might receive a PDD-NOS diagnosis for this, but now it is not considered to be on the spectrum. The criteria to be diagnosed as on the spectrum seem to be a lot more rigid now.



I though NVLD had RRRBs too? And yes PDD a-NOSA is on the spectrum if you had that diagnosis you were relabeled autism spectrum disoder under the DsM v


Yes, I know PDD- NOS is on the spectrum. I was saying that, in the past, someone might have received a PDD-NOS diagnosis for what they are now diagnosing as SCD, and SCD is not considered a spectrum disorder. So, this is why I said the criteria for the diagnosis is more rigid now.

I don't know what RRRBs is. I just know that NVLD is not a diagnosis here, but I believe SCD is the closest we have in the US.



Sorry RRRBs is a typo I meant RRBs restrictive repeatitive behaviors


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Fitzi
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28 Feb 2015, 11:06 am

ASdogGeek wrote:


Sorry RRRBs is a typo I meant RRBs restrictive repeatitive behaviors


Ahh.

No, I don't think NVLD has RRBs. I think that this is what separates an ASD diagnosis from NVLD or SCD. I may be wrong.

NVLD also seems to have some academic symptoms attached to it. I find it confusing.



jenisautistic
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28 Feb 2015, 10:05 pm

And what about social communication disorder?


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Fitzi
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28 Feb 2015, 11:55 pm

jenisautistic wrote:
And what about social communication disorder?


Social Communication Disorder is having issues with pragmatic speech (two way conversations, understanding inference, etc.) and issues with picking up on social cues. People who have this do not have restrictive, repetitive behaviors, and are not considered on the spectrum according to the DSM-V. It also does not have academic issues associated with it like NVLD does.



terajk
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01 Mar 2015, 10:46 am

I think a lot of confusion about NLD is because of the difference between what Doris Johnson & Helmer Myklebust used "disorders of nonverbal learning" to mean in the 60s and what Byron P. Rourke used "syndrome of nonverbal learning disabilities" and "NLD" to mean later. (Disclaimer: while some of Rourke's ideas have been validated by science--e.g. he felt NLD was a disorder of white matter, and MRIs find white matter abnormalities in a substantial chunk of NLD people--I think Rourke is kind of like the archeologist dude in the 1800s who dug so gleefully and carelessly that he destroyed a lot of artefacts.)

Back in the 1960s when Dr. Samuel Kirk coined the term "learning disabilities" (or shortly after), he defined them as (emphasis mine):

“Children with special learning disabilities exhibit a disorder in one or more of the basic psychological processes involved in understanding or in using spoken or written language. These may be manifested in disorders of listening, thinking, talking, reading, writing, spelling, or arithmetic.:

So, learning disabilities were originally all thought to be based in language. But in 1967, Doris Johnson & Helmer Myklebust published a book about learning disabilities where they described kids who fit the learning disabilities framework but whose impairments weren't based in language. They called these disorders "disorders of nonverbal learning." They weren't a syndrome with multiple parts you had to have all of to be diagnosed with. They were just a group of learning disabilities affecting nonverbal skills. So some kids had problems with math; some had problems with rhythm and music; some got lost easily; some had visual processing problems; some had problems with handwriting and/or other motor skills; some had problems with social skills. Some had more than one, but they didn't need to have all of them.

For some reason, Byron Rourke turned a heterogenous group of disorders into one syndrome. Not only that, but he also made that syndrome into a "model"--a research framework to look at other complex conditions through. He came up with, like, 20 other syndromes the NLD model was useful for. In his 1980s book "Nonverbal Learning Disabilities: The Syndrome and the Model," he argues that autism is NLD plus global language impairment. (He was wrong.)

I'm not sure, but I think the newer focus on "subtypes" of NLD is an attempt to go back to Johnson & Myklebust's original definition. But everyone's subtypes are different. John M. Davis & Jessica Broitman argue that the core features of NLD are visual-spatial problems and executive function problems. In her thesis, Dianne Matthaei argues that NLD's name should be changed to "spatial learning disorder"--the word "spatial" including visual-spatial skills and spatial-motor skills.

But then again, I'm just someone who was diagnosed with NLD by a neuropsychologist back in the 90s. (I have severe navigational problems, mild social and math problems, and either mild or no executive functioning problems, so...)

Tera



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02 Mar 2015, 7:18 am

It appears that often NVLD is used to describe something like "developmental social disorders which are probably not related to childhood autism". Issues such as problems with eye contact, facial expression, interpersonal distance, body posture, gestures (nonverbal communication impairments - dyssemia) might be thought to be some of "NVLDs". Literal interpretations are often classified as a symptom of NLD, not only ASD. Having nonverbal learning disorder does not mean that the person has to be socially inept and (or) "nerdy".

I even read that some "NLD children" can have problems with theory of mind. I think that all developmental socio-emotional disorders (like childhood autism) should be classified in one group.

Why people from mild end of autism spectrum can receive "serious" diagnosis of PDD or ASD, and those with "social NLDs" not? They are also markedly inept socially. Why they are worse? It is not fair! For me HF ASD and "social NLDs" are other types of the same conditions. They are often accompanied by cognitive (nonverbal and (or) verbal learning problems), motoric, sensory, executive functioning disorders.

I think that all "developmental socio-emotional disorders" ("DSEDs", like "social NLDs" and "autism spectrum conditions") should be classified in ONE category which has to be distinct from "scholastic disabilities" like dyslexia or dyscalculia and from speech disorders, from personality disorders, anxiety and mood disorders, from conduct disorders in ICD and DSM. "Social NLD" and other "non-autistic" DSEDs should have the same ICD code like autism spectrum disorders (it would be the counterpart of the term "pervasive developmental disorders"). DSEDs make a person "odd since childhood".



nca14
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09 May 2015, 8:34 am

terajk wrote:
For some reason, Byron Rourke turned a heterogenous group of disorders into one syndrome. Not only that, but he also made that syndrome into a "model"--a research framework to look at other complex conditions through. He came up with, like, 20 other syndromes the NLD model was useful for. In his 1980s book "Nonverbal Learning Disabilities: The Syndrome and the Model," he argues that autism is NLD plus global language impairment. (He was wrong.)


Autism = NVLD + global language impairment? It might not look so wrong for me after reading some of descriptions of "NVLD", for example from this page: http://non-vld.wikispaces.com/NVLD+Subtypes

Social NVLD:
· Primary area of difficulty is social skills and difficulties with interpersonal interactions; in pattern recognition terms, problems with recognizing both social and behavourial patterns;
· Problems making and keeping friends; inappropriate social behaviours; lack of understanding of personal space;
difficulty maintaining social conversation; loner personality; fixation on certain topics or interests out of the normal range for their age group;

· Have difficulty reading social cues and non-verbal communication from their visual environment (tone of voice,
facial expression, body language)
and do not have a strong cache of internalized rules by which to monitor, plan and execute interpersonal interaction;
· Strangely they often score high on social knowledge but do not appear to he able to access these skills when
required in real-life situations

· can “talk the talk” but can’t “ walk the walk”;
· They are in turn hard to read because they lack variety in their own nonverbal behaviours; they may appear to be flat, apathetic, lacking empathy, or even quite unfeeling;


This "social NVLD" for me is a sort of "aspieness", not (just) a problem with learning.



DrowningOutTheDarkness
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08 Mar 2017, 1:19 pm

I was diagnosed with nvld when I was 9 I think I would have asd today and I feel a little invalidated because of that. I am also female and as you might know females are harder to diagnose because we present differently. I think nvld is on the spectrum or I should get re-diagnosed!


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NikNak
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08 Mar 2017, 9:44 pm

Given the similar symptom profiles and the fact ASD is so variable with researchers unable to indentify a clear cause/s...I'd say there's a very good chance NVLD is part of the spectrum as I'm yet to see any evidence that it isn't? Perhaps NVLD is just another manifestation of ASD in people who are less visual?


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09 Mar 2017, 9:45 am

There is a strong association between Nonverbal Learning Disorder and "high-functioning" autism (especially within what, under the DSM-IV, was called Asperger's). I've read of an 80% correlation between the two.

Though it's not inevitable that one with NVLD has Asperger/Autism, or vice versa.