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ASPartOfMe
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04 Aug 2023, 8:46 am

Spectrum News

Quote:
The journal Autism in Adulthood has received an impact factor of 6.8 for 2022 — its first score since its launch in 2019 — according to Clarivate’s 2023 update to its Journal Citation Reports. It is among 9,136 journals that received an impact factor for the first time in 2022.

The metric — which tracks a journal’s average citation rate during the previous two years — vaults Autism in Adulthood “to the top of the list of autism journals” and places it among the most-cited developmental psychology journals, says David Mandell, professor of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and former editor-in-chief of Autism which has a 2022 score of 5.2.

The score for the new journal reflects a high level of interest in research on autistic adults, Mandell says, and suggests that Autism in Adulthood’s editors have solicited “high-quality science.”

Although journal self-citation — when an article in a journal cites other articles published in the same journal — can artificially inflate a journal’s impact factor, Autism in Adulthood retains the highest impact factor among autism journals even when self-citations are excluded from the calculation.

The journal “excels” when it comes to qualitative papers and papers focused on lived experience, says Zachary Williams, an autistic medical and doctoral candidate at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, who has published in the journal but is not on its editorial board. Autism in Adulthood’s most-cited paper, which advises autism researchers on how to avoid ableist language, was referenced 130 times during the prior two years.

But research about autistic adults remains in its infancy — autism was long pigeonholed as a childhood condition — and Autism in Adulthood’s gaps reflect that. It has never published a multi-site randomized controlled trial, for example, notes the journal’s founding editor-in-chief, Christina Nicolaidis, professor in the School of Social Work at Portland State University in Oregon.

Qualitative work can be “extraordinarily helpful” in building theory that should guide research, Mandell says. “At some point, we have to move beyond theory building.” He says he hopes to see more rigorous quantitative research about autistic adults as well.

Autism in Adulthood — like Nicolaidis’s other project, the Academic Autism Spectrum Partnership in Research and Education (AASPIRE) — was founded to prioritize research that aims to improve the lives of autistic adults. Nicolaidis co-founded AASPIRE with Dora Raymaker, an autistic research associate professor also at Portland State University’s School of Social Work, and Raymaker is now an editor at Autism in Adulthood as well.

Since its inception, the journal has had autistic people on the editorial team, at least one autistic reviewer on every paper, briefs that explain why the research reflects community priorities, first-person “insight essays” and an anti-ableist language policy — features that some other autism journals have since adopted.

“I think that there’s a general wave in autism research that Autism in Adulthood may have been the first to catch,” Mandell says, related to the philosophy of “nothing about us without us” — the idea that “autistic people should have a powerful voice in autism research.”

“We’re inching, inching, inching along,” Nicolaidis says. “We have so much to go as a field. But I’m hopeful that ultimately the journal really can help and have, ultimately, people lead the lives they want to lead.”


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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity

“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman


carlos55
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04 Aug 2023, 10:28 am

There needs to be more info and help for autistic adults it’s like life stops at 18 if your autistic


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"The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends upon the unreasonable man."

- George Bernie Shaw