Sensory sensitivity: Difference between revisions
From ActuallyAutistic Wiki
(Added a "See also" section with links to a few pages) |
(→See also: Clarify; add interoception and emotions (I'm increasingly suspecting the latter's built onto the former)) |
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* [[Sensory overload]] | * [[Sensory overload]] | ||
* [[Auditory perception]] | * [[Auditory perception]] (sound) | ||
* [[Gustatory perception]] | * [[Gustatory perception]] (taste) | ||
* [[Olfactory perception]] | * [[Olfactory perception]] (smell) | ||
* [[Tactile perception]] | * [[Tactile perception]] (touch) | ||
* [[Visual perception]] | * [[Visual perception]] (sight) | ||
* [[Interoception]] (internal -- thirst, hunger, etc) | |||
* [[Alexithymia]] (emotions) | |||
[[Category:Senses]] | [[Category:Senses]] | ||
[[Category:Stubs]] | [[Category:Stubs]] |
Latest revision as of 15:41, 10 November 2022
This page or section is a stub. Perhaps you can help add something to it? 😊
Autistic people are often hypersensitive or hyposensitive to certain sensory stimuli. Different senses may be affected in different ways.
Hypersensitivity[edit]
Definition, examples
Hyposensitivity[edit]
Definition, examples
See also[edit]
- Sensory overload
- Auditory perception (sound)
- Gustatory perception (taste)
- Olfactory perception (smell)
- Tactile perception (touch)
- Visual perception (sight)
- Interoception (internal -- thirst, hunger, etc)
- Alexithymia (emotions)