Emily's Cat
Rarely prone to hissy-fits
The rapid increase in autism can't be totally accounted for because of the change in how the disease is diagnosed.
Why not?
The rapid increase in autism can't be totally accounted for because of the change in how the disease is diagnosed.
It depends on what research you read but in a matter of just 15 years the autism rate in the US has gone from 1/150 to 1/68 births. That increase can't be totally accounted for based on the change in diagnostic criteria. Rates are higher in developed countries as opposed to rates in non developed countries but they attribute that difference to a lack of infrastructure available for diagnosing and tracking this condition.
In former times, kids would be classified as "slow" or "dull" or any number of other derogatory terms.My understanding is that it's a constellation of things, none of which are actually a higher prevalence of the disorder. A very large part of it is due to a reclassification of certain symptom clusters as being autism spectrum disorders where they used to be generalized mental retardation. Part of it is due to a refinement of the diagnosis criteria. Part of it is due to an extended definition that includes the spectrum element, and picks up Asperger's as well as a couple of others.
Finally, part of it is also due to increased awareness. The more people who know about it, the more you see parents suspecting that their child has an autism spectrum disorder, and taking them to be diagnosed. Without that effort at awareness, a large number of high-functioning Autism spectrum disorders would never have been suspected, and would never have been diagnosed. They just would have been "quirky" or "weird" kids who turned in to eccentric adults.
I give it a 95% chance that if I were to go in and be evaluated, I would come out with a diagnosis that places me on the autism spectrum. So would my mom, my grandpa, and my nephew. My cousin has actually been diagnosed with Asperger's... and while he's a bit more extreme than the rest of us, he's not actually any different in behavior than we are. We all see the same symptoms in ourselves. But none of us have difficulty functioning, we're all just fine with the fact that we're a little weird, don't really do social things much, have difficulty relating to "normal" people, and prefer solitude. A bunch of other little symptoms as well, but still.
In former times, kids would be classified as "slow" or "dull" or any number of other derogatory terms.
Why some find it odd that such afflictions are placed on the autistic spectrum now seems not just strange but strangely and unnecessarily cruel.
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Itching is a precursor to pain. It's a protective mechanism that alerts you to a potential problem.
Well if you scratch an itch and it becomes infected you may experience pain but I don't know of any situation where an itch will become pain otherwise. But I am open to suggestions from others.
We have a TV personality, a scientist called Karl Kruszelnicki, (otherwise known as Dr Karl), who claims that no one know of any benefits from having itches.
You're looking at this through your theistic glasses Jodie. Because we have itches the designer must have had a reason to give them to us.
I'll look to see what the research says about it but just off the cuff, based on reading previous research for neuroscience, if cues are consciously recognized then you would have associative memories to base a decision for staying or leaving an area.
the research journals are not normally available for public reading ... those are the journals where all the most authoritative research papers are collected, but there is no public demand to see or read any of the millions of papers published there.
....
Finally - what is published in a medical journal or in a journal in fields such as psychology, whilst it may be genuine science of a sort, is not remotely comparable with papers published by theoretical physicists in Phys. Rev. (or chemists publishing in JACS or J.Chem.Soc. etc.).
Do be careful about what you read as "research" and "papers".
For example - in fundamental core science (by which I mean mainstream physics, chemistry, most of biology, and most fields of Maths that are directly related to research in science (and that's most of Maths, one way or another), and various related fields such as a astronomy, genetics, crystallography...), the research journals are not normally available for public reading ... those are the journals where all the most authoritative research papers are collected, but there is no public demand to see or read any of the millions of papers published there.
Out of curiosity, I tried to see how far one could get without a subscription, and it looks like abstracts are the best one can get.
Primordial Black Hole Scenario for the Gravitational-Wave Event GW150914 Misao Sasaki, Teruaki Suyama, Takahiro Tanaka, and Shuichiro Yokoyama
Phys. Rev. Lett. 117, 061101 – Published 2 August 2016
Are those the kinds of papers that you're talking about, or is there a level where things are unavailable beyond even that, and even titles and abstracts are hidden from the public?
And as for the medical papers that are on a lower tier than what theoretical physicists are doing, is this a good example (also available with a free abstract only)?
Conditions for fear
Fiona Carr
Nature Reviews Neuroscience 16, 576–577 (2015) doi:10.1038/nrn4030
Published online 09 September 2015
State-dependent memories are those that are most successfully retrieved when conditions at the time of recall are the same as they were at encoding, but the mechanisms that lead to state-dependent learning are not known. Jovasevic et al. now show that activation of extrasynaptic GABA type A receptors (GABAARs) in…
If it's a recent physics paper, it or a draft version will be on arxiv.Out of curiosity, I tried to see how far one could get without a subscription, and it looks like abstracts are the best one can get.
I don't think there is any deliberate attempt to keep any journals, papers, or information away from anyone in the public. It's just that the vast mass of the public are not interested in reading science research papers.
I don't even think it's lack of interest. I think the majority of it is lack of requisite knowledge to be able to comprehend those papers.
I'm curious and interested in a ton of stuff, from astrophysics to biology, genetics to cognitive psychology. But I'm uneducated on those topics. Heck, even though I'm fairly well-educated when it comes to mathematics, it's been so long since I've applied that knowledge that I have difficulty following along any technical discussions of it. I might very well *want* to read scientific research papers published in peer-reviewed journals... but I am *unable* to effectively comprehend them.
Scientific papers are published for other scientists in that area who already know the terms, jargon, and basic elements of that field. They're not written for laypeople.
Yeah, this is a good point. There's probably no reason at all other than stuff happens after other stuff over time and we feel itches.*
We humes are always ready with a just-so story for everything. It ain't necessarily so. Teleology is a boon and a curse.
(* I hate 'em too! Make a back-scratcher from something, but don't press hard!)
Thanks Ian, I do have access through the university where I work but honestly don't have time to pull anything other than journals specific to nurse-midwifery and obstetrics. I might be able to understand the medical jargon but not the math involved in very detailed neuro research.
What I was referring to was what is commonly available on Google scholar, NIH, etc... about the process of how our senses create data to build up what we see and experience, associative memories are just one element involved.
Thanks Donn. Can't seem to get a comeback from Jodie on this one though.
Sorry Thor, I missed whatever you were talking about, what was the question/point you were referring too?
Originally Posted by Jodie View Post
Itching is a precursor to pain. It's a protective mechanism that alerts you to a potential problem.
Well if you scratch an itch and it becomes infected you may experience pain but I don't know of any situation where an itch will become pain otherwise. But I am open to suggestions from others.
We have a TV personality, a scientist called Karl Kruszelnicki, (otherwise known as Dr Karl), who claims that no one know of any benefits from having itches.
You're looking at this through your theistic glasses Jodie. Because we have itches the designer must have had a reason to give them to us.