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Revision as of 04:49, 23 February 2023
Welcome to the ActuallyAutistic Wiki! This is a community-driven guide to all aspects of autism, allism, and helping build bridges between neurotypes. It emerged recently from the #ActuallyAutistic community on Twitter.
About this wiki
- Everyone is welcome to contribute to this wiki!
- You can edit any page without even having an account. Just hit the 'Edit' link on any page (including this one!). Important privacy note: editing a page without having an account or without being logged in will show your IP address publicly in the changelog/history of a page.
- The number one rule of wiki editing is to be bold. Go ahead – make changes — even large rewrites of big topics. Other people can correct any mistakes you make, so have confidence, and give it a try!
- If you disagree with what someone else has put, please consider adding a note of disagreement and what you think/would do after that section, especially if it could be something that varies by country or even situations or if you want to change it to/from an absolute (such as job interviews or eye gaze)
- None of the content here is sacred. Please just make changes, even to articles on 'major' topics! Some of the articles are just starter content or from a particular person's perspective. Earlier versions can always be restored if necessary. These are all collaborative documents.
How to contribute
- Here is a short guide on how to create a new wiki page from scratch! Please check first whether a similar page already exists to avoid duplicates.
- Here are some of our style guidelines if you're unsure about formatting etc. But don't worry or overthink too much about "getting things right", these are not "hard rules" – and everything can be edited, formatted & moved later without issue anyway! :)
- Please remember that links are CASE SENSITIVE. When linking to a missing page, whichever case you use will be created when someone follows the link and makes that new page. Linking to existing articles is case sensitive for every letter except the first one. Lowercasing or capitalizing a letter other than the first one will break the link / not link to the page you want. Please read this guide on links if you want to use them!
- Do you have some feedback, questions or suggestions about this wiki project? Feel free to add them here!
Meta
- Looking for stuff to do, but unsure where to start?
Terminology
Acronyms
- Kinetism (ADHD)
- AuDHD
- DCD
- EDS
- SPD
- ND
- NT (Neurotypical)
- MH
- SpIn/SpInt
- RSD (Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria)
- Positive Behavior Support (PBS) (What's that?)
- AAC
- Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA)
General
Autism specific
Other
- Grok
- Highly Sensitive Person
- Justice sensitivity
- Late diagnosis
- Rejection sensitive dysphoria
- Savant
- Miscellaneous terms - for similar/confusing terms and definitions that probably better in one place rather than multiple short articles
Outmoded terminology
While many autists have moved away from these terms, some continue to use them to describe their experience. Please remember that people may have complex reasons for the words they choose, and that differences in vocabulary are okay. In short, while it's important to understand how these outdated terms play to most autists, it's also not helpful to police other people's word choices.
List of Autistic traits (incomplete)
Not every autistic person necessarily has many of the traits listed below, but these traits do tend to show up more often in autistic people than in non-autistic people.
Core autistic traits
- Autistic empathy
- Hyper-senses & hypo-senses
- Preference for certainty
- Routine / Ritual
- Special interests
- Stimming
Autistic nonverbal communication
Autistic verbal communication
- Accent mimicry
- Bluntness Direct
- Conditional Mutism circumstantial or situational mutism
- Difficulty lying
- Monotone voice
- Reframing
- Verbal footnoting
- Nonspeaking
- Phone call avoidance
- Wordplay
- Aphasia
- Auditory processing difficulties
- Preference for infodumping
- Thinking in pictures and struggling to articulate said picture into words
- Autistic speech prosody
Gender and sexuality
- Gender
- Autigender
- Autism and LGBTQ+
- Peritiosexual
- Neuroqueer
- Xenogender
- Asexuality
- Aromanticism
- Aplatonicism
Imperatives and neurological
- Resistance to bias
- Dissociation
- Irrational fears, neurological
- Divergent stress triggers
- Divergent touch needs
- Ethical fearlessness
- Experiential recreation
- Gullibility
- Inability to intuit the "point of diminishing returns"
- Intense world theory
- Median (plurality)
- Nonlinear contradiction response
- Pattern recognition
- Preference for certainty
- Prosopagnosia
- Plurality
- Susceptibility to trauma
- Sympathetic animism
- name? Willful Sensorium Override
Familial
Memory
Psychological
- Cat empathy
- Hyper-empathy
- Hypo-empathy
- Preference for animation
- Preference for autistically coded characters
- Gravitate towards other neurodivergents
- Hyper-phantasia empathising with inanimate objects.
Physical
Traumagenic Autistic traits
(Contradiction...?) --Fochti (talk) 18:56, 26 August 2022 (UTC)
No, they are logical fears that are irrational out of context of ND.
I think the page could be titled differently then, it sounds very ambiguous/unclear to me? --Fochti (talk) 18:56, 26 August 2022 (UTC)
- Social anxiety
- Pathological demand avoidance/pervasive drive for autonomy extreme demand avoidance the following description is purely hypothetical and not composed in consultation with the adult PDA community: the combination of Autism and ADHD driving a non-stop rollercoaster ride of fight or flight responses (the autism wanting routine and the adhd wanting spontaneity) feeding the need to claw back control, reducing the brains capacity to regulate and rationalise likely resulting in crashes and observable ‘extreme reactions’ to what may be perceived as minor events. (This is what I am currently working on as part of my MA in Autism).
Additional Autistic traits
Comorbidities
- ADHD
- Allergies and Sensitivities (See also MCDs)
- Anxiety
- Apraxia
- Bipolar disorder
- Borderline/EUPD
- CPTSD
- Depression
- Dysautonomia
- Dyscalculia
- Dyslexia
- Dysgraphia
- Dyspraxia
- Eating disorders / ARFID
- EDS
- Hypermobility
- Hyperlexia
- Migraine
- MCDs: Mast Cell Diseases / Disorders including forms of MCAS, HaTS and Mastocytosis
- OCD
- PMDD Premenstrual Dysphoria Disorder
- PTSD Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
- Stress Incontinence
Information and sensory processing
Information processing differences
- Aphasia
- Auditory processing disorder
- Dyslexia
- Dyspraxia
- Dyscalculia
- Dysgraphia
- Hyperlexia
- Misokinesia
- Misophonia
- Prosopagnosia
- Synesthesia
Senses
Many autistics have differences in their senses, such as maybe hypersensitive to sound but hyposensitive to smell. These articles should try to document examples of both types as well as potential ways to compensate.
- Hearing
- Gastro-intestinal problems
- Interoception
- Pain
- Proprioception
- Sensory overload
- Sensory sensitivity
- Synesthesia
- Smell
- Taste
- Touch (texture, temperature)
- Vestibular perception
- Vision
- Aural sensitivity to electronics
Autistic survival guide
Allistic sociology 101
- Society
- Ableism
- Gender
- Gossip
- Group dynamics
- Peer group
- Phatic expression
- Saving face
- Small talk
- Social power
- Social contract
- Social status
Culture-specific differences
Psychology 101
- Alexithymia
- Anger
- Anxiety
- Defence mechanism
- Depression
- Empathy
- Imposter syndrome
- Learned helplessness
- Overthinking
- People pleasing
- Rumination
- Social anxiety
- Theory of mind
- Trauma
- Trauma bonding
- Trauma response
Neurology 101
Communication and miscommunication
- Common sense
- Double empathy problem
- Getting coffee
- Literal interpretation
- Multi-channel communication
- Pragmatics
- Responding to "How are you?"
- Social cues
- Idioms
Office and work dynamics
- Corporate buzzwords
- HR interviews
- Job interviews
- Meetings
- Networking
- Team building / work socials
- Water cooler
Dating and relationships
Accommodations and support
- AAC
- Autism passport
- Clear instructions
- Hidden disabilities sunflower
- Noise-cancelling headphones
- Support networks and organisations
Diagnostic journey
Mental health
Autism "research" and "therapy"
Mainstream research on autism is often problematic in various ways.
- Autism Speaks
- Autism stereotypes
- Bias
- Deficit model
- Functioning labels
- Ethics of autism research
- History of autism
- Pathology paradigm
- Stigma
- Applied behavior analysis
- Violence against Autistic people
Resources
Media
- Books by Autistic authors
- Podcasts by Autistic creators
- Autistic representation in fiction
- Symbols of Autism
Social media
Autistic culture
Articles and threads
- Articles
- "Am I Autistic?" Guide
- Autism without trauma
- Non-derogatory DSM-5 diagnosis criteria for Autism
- Signs you might be autistic
- Accidentally open secrets regarding Autism