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ASPartOfMe
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Today, 12:14 pm

9-year-old girl with autism has an IQ higher than Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking

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A young Mexico City native is spectacularly shattering widespread misconceptions about individuals with developmental disorders by proving her incredible intellectual capabilities…all at just 9 years of age. Adhara Pérez Sánchez has already made a name for herself in academic circles with an impressive IQ of 162. According to PEOPLE, this score is slightly higher than Albert Einstein's and Stephen Hawking's, both of whom had an estimated IQ of 160. Young Pérez has already graduated from high school and is currently in the process of earning two degrees—one in systems engineering and one in mathematics.

Speaking to the Yucatan Times, Pérez—who was diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, a developmental disorder that's included on the autism spectrum and can cause difficulties with social interactions—revealed that she was "made a mockery at school." Other students would bully the girl by calling her names like "weirdo" and "oddball" because of her condition. "I saw that Adhara was playing in a little house and they locked her up. And they started to chant: 'Oddball, weirdo!'" her mother, Nallely Sanchez, told the outlet. 'And then they started hitting the little house. So I said, I don't want her to suffer."

Sanchez revealed that her daughter fell into a "very deep" depression and despite being a bright young pupil, did not want to go to school anymore. Teachers informed her parents that Pérez would sleep in class and displayed an apparent lack of interest. Aware of the child's unusual smartness at home, Sanchez realized that the current education plan wasn't the right fit for her daughter and sought therapy for Pérez. This became a major turning point for the family as they were then able to identify the girl's extremely high IQ and seek a learning environment that adapts to her unique skill sets.

This helped Pérez flourish in academics and she finished elementary school by age 5, middle school by 6 and high school by 8. According to KNSD, she is currently attending Universidad CNCI—a university in Mexico—where she is studying systems engineering and mathematics. Even while juggling her studies, the child genius found the time to write a book about her experiences with a title that roughly translates to "Do Not Give Up" in English and was even featured in Forbes México‘s 100 Most Powerful Women in Mexico list.

She also gave a presentation on black holes at an event organized by the Institute of Art and Culture (IMAC) in Tijuana where other young kids were surprised to hear her speak. "I'm surprised because how can a little girl know so much more than an adult? She already has two college careers," said Karen Alonso, a young girl who attended the presentation. Pérez, who wants to explore astrophysics, hoped to work as an astronaut at NASA and travel to Mars in the future. She's already been invited to study astronomy at the University of Arizona after her story captured the attention of UA President Robert Robbins.


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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


lostonearth35
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Today, 12:25 pm

When I was a kid people said I was intelligent and they didn't even know I had Asperger's. But I'm no Einstein.
Boy, am I ever not. I might have been smart for a kid and even a teenager, but for an adult I'm clueless.

People think aspies and autistic people only have a chance at life if they have a savant skill, which most of us do not.



Knight Guard
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Today, 12:53 pm

Most autistic people have more capabilities and specific abilities that they do not know about, because many autistic people do not get the opportunity to train or study in his or hers special interest fields.

I think that is a big mistake with kids on the spectrum, not giving autistic kids the opportunity to explore his or hers special interests.

Just started a new podcast and would love to hear the feedback from the community.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=4dULs8Ii7WE&t=4s

This video the background noise was a little loud. Sorry about that, I will try to find quieter locations or time of day next video.

Either way, for those in this thread, experimenting with your special interests whether by joining a club or taking a class...those talents and interests are ingrained in you for a reason. Even if you just find your special interests on YouTube and start practicing your special interests till you get better. Building the muscle memory through repetition is how anyone gets better at anything, but especially autistic people. We're the masters at repetition and why we have so many geniuses throughout history from the autism spectrum ❤️



ASPartOfMe
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Today, 1:59 pm

Knight Guard wrote:
Most autistic people have more capabilities and specific abilities that they do not know about, because many autistic people do not get the opportunity to train or study in his or hers special interest fields.

I think that is a big mistake with kids on the spectrum, not giving autistic kids the opportunity to explore his or hers special interests.

Just started a new podcast and would love to hear the feedback from the community.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=4dULs8Ii7WE&t=4s

This video the background noise was a little loud. Sorry about that, I will try to find quieter locations or time of day next video.

Either way, for those in this thread, experimenting with your special interests whether by joining a club or taking a class...those talents and interests are ingrained in you for a reason. Even if you just find your special interests on YouTube and start practicing your special interests till you get better. Building the muscle memory through repetition is how anyone gets better at anything, but especially autistic people. We're the masters at repetition and why we have so many geniuses throughout history from the autism spectrum ❤️

Welcome to Wrong Planet.

Personally I find retro diagnosing questionable because people who are not autistic have these traits. Also the context and meaning of words and terms change. When reading contemporaries seemingly describing autistic traits of historical geniuses this is something to keep in mind.

Despite that objection I like where you are going with this. I do believe because of these traits there are a higher percentage of genius autistics then in the general population. I believe this is true in the creative fields also. I also believe the world would be a more happy and productive place if peoples individually were encouraged, not discouraged.


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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