Another autism causation theory - BAPCO Personality type

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ASPartOfMe
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02 Feb 2021, 6:16 am

Vanderbilt researcher proposes an explanatory paradigm for the cause of autism

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A unifying explanation of the cause of autism and the reason for its rising prevalence has eluded scientists for decades, but a theoretical model published in the journal Medical Hypotheses describes the cause as a combination of socially valued traits, common in autism, and any number of co-occurring disabilities.

T.A. Meridian McDonald, PhD, a research instructor in Neurology at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, has spent 25 years researching autism, from a time she could read literally every research paper on the topic in the 1990s until now, when there is an overload of such studies.

McDonald's theory, titled 'The Broader Autism Phenotype Constellation-Disability Matrix Paradigm (BAPCO-DMAP) Theory,' is consistent with the current science on the genetics of autism but shifts the focus to positive traits of autism and to historical events that changed the prevalence of autism in society.

"The BAPCO-DMAP theory describes how people are attracted to other people who are very similar. They are attracted to certain traits that are very common in the population, and this leads to offspring who are more likely to have certain traits, as well as a greater intensity of traits." McDonald said.

"The (BAPCO) traits are not what people expect. They expect the traits to be about challenges or difficulties, but instead there are six main traits -- increased attention, increased memory, a preference for the object world vs. the social world and their environment, increased nonconformity, increased differences in sensory and perception, as well as systemizing."

BAPCO traits alone are not necessarily disabling. A person can have BAPCO traits and still have excellent communication and socialization skills, but too much of any of these traits can affect development.

For example, although it seems counterintuitive, McDonald outlines how increased memory and attention can delay language development in children with BAPCO traits.

"Typical babies have tiny attention spans and working memory. These limitations on memory and attention actually help babies learn their first language by breaking the words into their tiniest parts," she said.

"But an infant with very high levels of attention and memory has a harder time with learning language because they are unable to break the language down to very small parts, so they learn groups of sounds instead."

McDonald describes how increased memory and attention can lead to echolalia, where children speak in, or repeat, long phrases without seeming to understand them.

BAPCO traits can also interact with disabilities. If a person has BAPCO traits and they also have a disability such as Down syndrome or information processing disorder, then those things combined can create greater challenges than what would be experienced by an individual who has only a BAPCO personality or a disability, but not both.

McDonald's theory also highlights how the prevalence of autism has increased in higher income countries due to societal changes that increase freedoms in education, employment and other opportunities for both men and women.

"The frequency and intensity of BAPCO traits in the U.S. have increased, for example, because individuals are more likely to meet and have children with other individuals with similar education, occupations and interests than would have been possible 100 years ago," she said.

McDonald said she now knows what causes autism but it is not something that could be cured and, honestly, she wouldn't want to do that.

"What we call 'autism' is the BAPCO personality combined with a disability or very intense BAPCO traits," she said. "Because the BAPCO is made of socially valued traits, it is not possible to cure autism. Instead, we need to focus on the full range of disabilities that affect people with and without the BAPCO personality."


I expect this theory to gain adhearents because it is theorizing what SOME in the neurodiversity movement have been saying for years, Autism is a personality type and any problems are not autism but comorbids.


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autisticelders
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02 Feb 2021, 6:36 am

This idea presumes that "rise in autism" is not attributable to better understanding, and does not take into account that perhaps better resources for diagnosis and understanding are simply more available in the wealthier areas of the world.
Among a load of other ideas that make no sense to me.
I vote thumbs down, I don't buy this one. Your mileage may vary.


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magz
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02 Feb 2021, 6:43 am

The BAPCO concept goes along my intuitions - that there are some traits that are just difference themselves but that alter and often magnify presentation of other issues and disabilities.
The part with "cause of autism epidemics" - I don't buy. It's been there all the time but it didn't draw much attention in times when a variety of much more obvious diseases and disabilities were the norm.


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02 Feb 2021, 6:50 am

I truly feel like a better understanding of autism, primarily, has led to its greater recent prevalence.



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02 Feb 2021, 8:53 am

Another theory. :P Therefore another term.

One that is based on expressed traits, yet again.
But this time, one based on the measured specific socially valued traits.


It reasonate more with my case and half of my inclinations, both fulfilled and unfulfilled to act upon. Mostly unfulfilled and unable to fulfill then and still.
But outside that, it's questionable.

I'm not that predictable. I kinda wish I'm.
There's something about me, outside autism, that does not fit this theory.


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02 Feb 2021, 9:09 am

I have my own personal theories on Autism. (Well..Specifically Aspies.) But I don't know if i could extrapolate my own circumstantial experience and generalize it across a broad range of people. It's too Heterogeneous a syndrome. Whats clear is it's a internal set of functioning reactions (yes, recognized and identified by expressed traits) that are dependent on hardwired(neuroplasticity aside) biological alteration in specific brain areas.


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