For the US, the CDC figures are here: http://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2014/ ... order.html
That's 1 in 68 overall, 1 in 42 boys, 1 in 189 girls with considerable variation between states.
TLDR: if you think autism should be less common, you are probably influenced by factors other than data/factual evidence. Given the prevalence of autism and the role of common variations in autism, it is to be expected that there would be tremendous variation in many characteristics in individuals with autism.
Slightly expanded thoughts:
If autism was caused by a handful of SNPs you might have autistic people being clones with a limited range of features, but given the very polygenic nature of autism and the importance of gene-environment interaction, you would expect a heterogenous autistic population.
You would also expect representation from all points along the curve for general intelligence and some autistic representation among people of great ability in many areas. It would be irrational to suppose that people of great accomplishment cannot be autistic, as has been suggested in the debates on posthumous diagnosis of famous people. There are all sorts of procedural problems with such diagnoses, but "people of such accomplishment cant be autistic because most autistic people don't have such abilities" is not one of them.
More detailed thoughts:
Recent studies show that genetic variations account for slightly more than half of the chance that a child will be autistic. Environment is just slightly less important, but still hugely important.
http://sfari.org/news-and-opinion/news/ ... utism-risk
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/279902.php
Given what is known from behavioral genetics and the study of other conditions with similar complex causes such as schizophrenia and even relative simple inherited characteristics like height, this information has quite a few implications.
Consider:
The "four laws of behavioral genetics" (first three from Eric Turkheimer, University of Virginia and the fourth from James Lee at the University of Minnesota) are
- All human behavioral traits are heritable
- The shared family environment has minimal impact on individual differences in behavior
- The non-shared environment exerts a major influence on individual differences in behavior (i.e., biographical events unique to the individual)
- Human behavioral traits are polygenic (There is no single gene for most behavioral or physical traits)
Given this understanding, it is to be expected that conditions with a behavioral component will typically be polygenic (as studies show ASDs are) and have a strong non-shared environmental influence (as ASDs do). We can further conclude that gene environment (GxE) interaction is likely to be very important (as studies suggest in ASDs).
There are now many studies that show features of autism in the non-autistic siblings of autistic people. This observed evidence strongly supports the idea of a broader autistic phenotype, with subclinical traits occurring at even higher rates among the relatives of the diagnosed. (
http://sfari.org/news-and-opinion/news/ ... first-year ,
http://sfari.org/news-and-opinion/in-br ... n-families )
So we have a picture of autism that should lead us to expect (or at least not to be surprised by) relatively high incidence and a very heterogenous population. It seems likely to me, given that we know the genetic changes in individuals with autism can have synergistic effects in the proteins they encode (
http://sfari.org/news-and-opinion/news/ ... teractions ) that we will find clusters of phenotypes within ASD. Some of the "those supposedly autistic people are not quite like me or these autistic people I know, therefore they do not really have autism" arguments that we see from time to time on WP are probably the result of this clustering. I strongly suspect that this will also account for an "Asperger's" cluster within the normal to high IQ (aka HFA) ASD population. But that's speculation. Evidence will be coming in though, so these issues won't be matters for speculation for ever.
Last edited by Adamantium on 22 Jul 2014, 9:23 am, edited 1 time in total.