Revisiting autism and the extreme male brain

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paxfilosoof
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07 Nov 2014, 6:58 pm

kraftiekortie wrote:
On WrongPlanet, the male/female ratio is almost 1:1.

I think, once the autism "epidemic" is resolved, that there will be many more females diagnosed, and that the ratio will be closer to 1:1 than it is now.


Prove something with peer-reviewing articles, otherwise you're not doing anything more then giving a statement.

and btw, the aspie affection is 1/3 females lol!



Last edited by paxfilosoof on 07 Nov 2014, 7:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.

paxfilosoof
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07 Nov 2014, 6:59 pm

kraftiekortie wrote:
On WrongPlanet, the male/female ratio is almost 1:1.

I think, once the autism "epidemic" is resolved, that there will be many more females diagnosed, and that the ratio will be closer to 1:1 than it is now.


Believe is not very scientific lol!

I believe actually that their are much more males with asperger/autism, and the scientific literature agree with me :)

Arguing that their is a 1:1 relationship is VERY CONTROVERSIAL, and VERY DIFFICULT TO PROVE, just saying! :)



kraftiekortie
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07 Nov 2014, 7:11 pm

I'm not arguing there is a 1:1 relationship. I'm arguing there are more females with ASD's than previously thought.

But, really, it doesn't matter.

What matters is what occurs in one's microcosmic life.

I might have "social difficulties"--but I have found a way to "get around" them.



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09 Nov 2014, 5:55 pm

Paxfilosoof, you cray cray, stop it. While there is certainly some truth to less girls being diagnosed because less girls demonstrate clinical autistic behavior, your rant is full of misogyny, lack of understanding of statistics, poor logic, and is in general not scientific.


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paxfilosoof
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10 Nov 2014, 7:39 am

Ganondox wrote:
Paxfilosoof, you cray cray, stop it. While there is certainly some truth to less girls being diagnosed because less girls demonstrate clinical autistic behavior, your rant is full of misogyny, lack of understanding of statistics, poor logic, and is in general not scientific.


Dear Ganondox,

1. Don't use straw man arguments, by attacking a person, instead of correcting mistakes...
2. It was not my intention to say anything misogyny.
I'm not saying anything mosogyny, I'm only stating that the most likely explanation for a higher incidence in males is not because of misdiagnosis. But because females in general are less autistic.

Second, one explanation for this fact is because the average female has less autistic traits. I know 2 females with asperger syndrome, and 5 males with asperger syndrome.
One of the female was once very socially awkward and today she has a boyfriend and lots of friends.
The other is social awkward, but she is still much more "liked" by most people of school and she is more social then all the males with asperger syndrome.

The reason why I said that females/males issues also effects the diagnosis of autism/asperger, is because much more males are sceptic of psychology and social sciences, and this "social" sciences only flourished some decades ago. 50 years ago most people were very sceptical about psychology and all this other associated sciences, because it was generally accepted that this was creating discrimination. My grandfather who is probably more 'autistic' then me, was a civil engineer, highly respected because he was good in science and logical thinking/mathematics. Nowadays he is not, time changes, and the view of autism is also changing.

But nevermind, I onyl wanted to give you my opinion. You can believe what you want about the sex ratio in autism and my "misogyny" behavior, but i'm actually stating that females were abused in earlier times, and that at this moment males are more likely abused. I can say you are misandry, because you don't take the abuse of males at this time in history serious. But I won't, because I know most people don't see it at this moment in time, but rest assured, in a couple of decades the males will create their own groups where they are fighting against male discrimination. Actually, such groups already exist today, but are much less influential then feminism.

In general people are very skeptical of this statement: "males who are abused", but it's entirely possible that males are/ and can be abbused.

But I will stop posting, because it doesn't help anyone. Go help some more females with autism because they have more "problems", and ignore the hundreds of males (also on this forum in the dating section) who are angry and sad because they still didn't find a girlfriend, and maybe you can wonder why more males are diagnosed with autism or asperger syndrome.

Actually, there are females on this forum complaining why they attract "social stupid males" and "introverts" opposed of the neurotypical males who are "outgoing", and autistic males are "not caring enough" according to this female aspies, the funny thing about that is because these females complain why they don't get a caring "neurotypical husband", while they are themselves "socially uncaring" [btw, I don't agree, I think males/females aspies are also caring, but in different ways, I don't believe in the theory of mind and other empathie theories from Baron-Cohen and his fellow researchers]. The males on this forum at the date section complains about: "how can I have a grilfriend?". Many males here actually didn't have a girlfriend in their life when they're 30 or higher. Most females have at a much younger age, also somethign which has been changed since the sexual revolution. But you don't have to believe me ;)

Do you see the irony of this posts in the dating section?
I suggest you to read posts like this: http://www.wrongplanet.net/postt240734.html

btw, my English is not perfect because I only learned a little bit of English during my school time.

p.s. I had a lot of respect of someone who read many articles about autism/asperger and trying to do honest research, but I lost a lot of this respect because you call me mygonist because i have stated many times that males with asperger syndrome/autism are 1) more diagnosed 2) most of the time less interested in social contact/and alcohol drinking parties.

I suggest you to read more articles on male/female mating behavior and why female aspies in general have less problems in finding a sexual relationship.


Yours sincerely,
Paxfilosoof



Last edited by paxfilosoof on 10 Nov 2014, 11:09 am, edited 4 times in total.

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10 Nov 2014, 9:10 am

Ganondox wrote:
I disagree with the apparent notion that girls just suddenly get severe autism once enough autistic genes are present, I find that absurd. More likely, I think there is a phenotype present in both girls and boys with the genes which could be considered autism in some sense, but some other traits the girls have prevent it from manifesting as a disorder unless other factors, like cognitive impairment, override whatever the harmonizing traits are.
I agree. Your thinking is more consistent with biological systems in general. The problem seems to be in the researchers working definition of autism, something I think most of the researchers are well aware of.

Quote:
This is where oxytocin or whatnot may play in. Thinking about it this way, it's not that autistic traits aren't present, it's that we don't even understand what the autistic traits truly are. Discovering what those common traits among both those with clinical autism and just the genes would be a victory for both neurodiversity and the pro-cure movement.
Yes. And I think the result of current research will be the emergence of a new consensus about these traits.

Quote:
In an ironic way, it's seems this hypothetical fundamental autistic trait may actually be considered a feminine trait, because it's in harmony with other feminine traits, while in disorder with male traits. I could go on in more detail about my overarching theory of autism, but I digress.
I tend to disagree with the implied understanding of male and female traits, but my ideas about what are male traits may be distorted by my own autism. I would love to hear more about your overarching theory of autism.



kraftiekortie
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10 Nov 2014, 9:12 am

In essence, it really doesn't matter. We're talking about people here, not generalized genders. I don't relate to a whole gender as an abstract entity: I relate to the individual lady.



Last edited by kraftiekortie on 10 Nov 2014, 9:42 am, edited 1 time in total.

paxfilosoof
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10 Nov 2014, 9:41 am

Ganondox wrote:
If you've read some of my older posts, you might now that I very much do not buy the extreme male brain theory. I'm going to make it clear now that I'm still throughly convinced autism is NOT an extreme male brain by any means, and it's my belief that the typical autistic brain is more androgynous than either is typical for either gender, though on the male side of perfect androgyny. I have many many criticisms for the theory, even if the male-female part is cut out, but I'm not going to go into them here. I'll just leave it that some males with autism have been shown to have brains that are in some regard more feminine than some control males, and IMO that stands as a single contrary fact that refutes the hypothesis that autism is the extreme male brain. Rather, I want to talk about how an extreme male brain DOES relate to autism. The most credence I'll give to it is something like this:

If autism were an extreme male brain, this graph would hold:
Image
Which I find to be complete and other BS.

Rather, the most credence I'd give is to a graph more along these lines:
Image
Where someone is in the green area, they are considered autistic. The "Borat" factor (so named because it overshadows Borat's cousin's factor, and because I don't feel like thinking up an actual name) isn't anything specific, it's just whatever makes someone autistic that is independent from masculization of the brain, and is considered the key factor here. However, if you control for the Borat factor, locally autism would appear as an extreme-male brain.

It is my humble opinion that an actual extreme male brain exists, and it apparently displays autistic traits, but IS NOT ACTUALLY AUTISTIC, at least not unless the person happens to have both an extreme male brain AND autism. Studies have shown that "autistic traits" are correlated with higher prenatal testosterone levels, but no evidence has been found for autism itself. Maybe in some cases extreme male brain can manifest as autism to a degree where it's semantics where it's autism or not in the same way Fragile X is sometimes and sometimes not considered a form of autism due to it's well established pathology. Anyway, as implied with "apparently I also believe some of the so-called autistic traits are not actually autistic at all. For example, let's look at a model of an extreme-male mindset and focus on a specific trait.

Whether based on cultural norms or biology, I think that John Wayne's character in The Searchers, Ethan Edwards, stands as model for the extreme male mindset. His character does superficially Aspergers....if you know absolutely nothing about Aspergers and just read that men with it are insensitive. Rather, I'd saying being insensitive isn't actually even a trait of autism, going with the intense world theory, I think a more accurate description is "disconnected", but once the connection is made, there is hypersensitivity, as with everything else. Meanwhile, someone who is merely insensitive will register at a lower threshold, they just won't heed it until it's at higher threshold. See the graph below.

Image

One is just an adjustment of weights, the other suggests a substantial difference in cognition.

Now, assuming the borat factor exists, it's a manner of semantics whether autism is the borat factor and displaying more "male" traits just increases the chance of diagnosis, or the extreme-male traits are traits of autism, but regardless, the fact remains that for two people with the same borat factor, the one with more masculine traits is more likely to diagnosed with autism. This was previously stated, but the new significance here is where it comes with diagnosing girls. Naturally, it could be assumed that women would tend to have male traits then men would, so even if the borat factor is the same across both genders, autism would be diagnosed more in boys. Now, here is where I think things get interesting: in the various studies investigating masculinization in autism by looking at various biological factors of masculinization, they fairly consisting find girls with autism have more masculine traits than controls, but the same does not hold for boys. Sure, at least the aforementioned mentioned with prenatal testosterone linked it to "autistic traits", but many others found the opposite result. For, one study looking brain scans in the very least didn't find more masculinization in the brains of autistic males, while another study looking at faces found that males with Aspergers actually had more feminine faces. Using pseudomath, we one part girls more "masculine" than controls, one part boys more "feminine" than controls, one part boys as masculine as controls, and one part boys more masculine than controls. This leaves us with a 3:1 ratio, which is just a bit less than the actual diagnosis ratio, but as this is pseudomath and in reality the centers of each cluster ought to be denser, the estimate is naturally low.

Just as the fact that on average girls with autistic disorder have more cognitive deficits than males with the same diagnosis suggests that high functioning autism is under diagnosed in girls, I believe this suggests that autism isn't actually a masculinization of the brain of any sort, but rather than just people don't get diagnosed with autism unless they display a certain level of "male traits", while many others still have the same fundamental difference (the borat factor) and just get overlooked because their more feminine traits mask the disorder. People often talked about autism being under-diagnosed in girls because it manifests differently in girls and experts aren't trained to recognize it in girls, but I never really understood how this worked until I considered the borat factor. It should be noted that just because autism is underdiagnosed in girls and it's not an extreme male brain doesn't mean it's not more prevalent in boys, there are countless other explanations for that that can also contribute, like genes found in certain sex chromosomes or a gender being more sensitive to other factors. It's also possible that feminine neurological traits may transform the same aspect so it no longer manifests as a disorder, for example more oxytocin and less vasopressin (as mentioned in this article)may reduce social/behavioral problems in an otherwise autistic neurology, causing it to be considered subclinical.

So, in summary, autism is not an extreme male brain, it's just male traits make a diagnosis of autism more probable as they are a confounding factor.


Btw, you didn't have give any proof or evidence why the prevalence is higher in males. The only thing you suggest is because females are more severely autistic. (Known from one study, but it is not been replicated in other studies.)

To use such isolated facts to try to prove that many females are underdiagnosed is in my honest opinion already too far from the main point. I can find many reasons why many males are not diagnosed with autism/asperger, for example many people with ADHD are later diagnosed with autism/asperger, this can make the female:male ratio even lower!

Also, many genes for autism are found on the sex chromosomes, which already suggest that the ratio can't be 1:1
If all genes that are associated with autism weren't on the XY chromosome, the ratio could possibly be 1:1, but this is not the case.

Also, it's important to note, that many male disorders only existed since after world war II. This could possibly means that view of society on people with autism and other conditions is changed (because autism and other conditions didn't exist since after world war II), and this is one possible reason why males are more diagnosed with autism/asperger syndrome.

btw, you point out that their is some factor why males are more likely to be diagnosed. This is true, and one possibility is that males are more likely today are thinkt of being wrong when not being very social (females in general are more social, this is evolutionary biology ;)), in earlier times this was not the case. Social contact before the 60-70 was less important.
The main reason is this: males are more likely to be autistic, because they're less social and less good in nonverbal communication.

Also the differences between the genders, and other gedner issues could have change this. You accept that autism is a disorder, which is already an assumption, because I don't believe it's a disorder, I think autism and asperger is the consequence of a new thinking (and thus change in society over the last 50 years), and partly to do with the sexual revolution.



Last edited by paxfilosoof on 10 Nov 2014, 4:26 pm, edited 2 times in total.

paxfilosoof
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10 Nov 2014, 9:57 am

Let me say something much more scientific then your speculation (based on a couple of articles form more than 100,000 articles about autism) why "females are underdiagnosed".

Some autism characteristics are on different chromosomes then the X and Y chromosome.
These characteristics are even in the male/female population (or atleast the genetics is even, but not the traits because other factors can change this like epigenetics), one example is gluten sensitivity more common in the autism population, if you don't believe it, I know you are not reading lots of scientific papers about autism only the popular articles.

For example gluten/casein sensitivity is an autistic characteristic (because it's a trait which is more common in the autism/asperger population, hence, this is an autism/asperger trait), which is located on 11q , 2q33, and their are many more genes known to make a higher chance of having a gluten sensitivity.


The main point is: autism is something with a lot of different characteristics; gluten sensitivity, facial differences, testosterone differencens, social differences, nonverbal communication differences, hair differencens, eye differencens, etc.

Some traits may be higher in the female or male population, but in general, more males have autism/asperger traits.
And I think few people can deny this, because, if you look around you, you'll see that more females are social and more males are not social (the main trait of autism/asperger). Males on average have more problemsn with nonverbal communication. (Also something which is and has been proven in the scientific research since the existing of gender studies.)

Also, if you want to prove that some females are underdiagnosed, why aren't you trying to prove that some males are underdiangosed? which is definitely a possibility. The reason why their is more evidence for a female underdiagnosing is because autism is long thought to be a male disorders (primary males), which is of course not true. researchers do research to find why things are. And one simple obsevations is that females are rarely autistic, and taht's why people try to explain why, and have hypothesis like: females are more "severe autistic" and more like that. The truth is, that more males are probably autistic, otherwise the differences could never be that high. Some studies about gender ratio in asperger syndrome population has ratios of 1 out of 8!! ! This can't be explained by your borat factor, it can only be explained because autistic males are not valued as much as in earlier times, like it or not, this is the truth.

And if you want to accuse me of being not scientific etc. go ahead, and show everyone you have the truth why "females" are less diangosed and why "extreme male brain theory" is incorrect, also an assumption based on some facts you have typed in your disserations.



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10 Nov 2014, 10:20 am

It seems to me that there is as yet insufficient evidence to cling passionately and dogmatically to any theory about this.

I find the intensity of the debate in this thread confusing and reminiscent of religion.



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10 Nov 2014, 10:27 am

It's because people feel victimized by the "opposite gender" as a collective entity.

These people have to look into themselves, and how they relate to the "opposite gender."

I know I had to! I used to be believe in the BS myself.

There's a lot of useless theorizing going on, which cuts into the theorizer's ability to relate to actual people.



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10 Nov 2014, 10:31 am

kraftiekortie wrote:
It's because people feel victimized by the "opposite gender" as a collective entity.

These people have to look into themselves, and how they relate to the "opposite gender."

I know I had to! I used to be believe in the BS myself.


That is fascinating! Thanks for explaining.
I tend to see each person as belonging to a set of one and may miss group properties because most social groupings seem like made up nonsense to me. But I can see that if you did believe in them and thought of things in an US and THEM kind of way, you could get worked up about it.



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10 Nov 2014, 11:03 am

kraftiekortie wrote:
It's because people feel victimized by the "opposite gender" as a collective entity.

These people have to look into themselves, and how they relate to the "opposite gender."

I know I had to! I used to be believe in the BS myself.

There's a lot of useless theorizing going on, which cuts into the theorizer's ability to relate to actual people.


You're partly right, but gender is an important factor in what makes you different from other people.
Gender, and personality combined makes you a unique person, not only gender.

About the theorizing I say this: it's the opposite, if you understand how the psychology of human beings is formed (and thus have and understand a lot of the differences between human beings) it's easier to understand and accept the differences between individuals and the gender issues. you're not creating a false view of how a person is or something.



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10 Nov 2014, 11:06 am

The results of this research is true in a collective sense, frequently untrue as to individual people.

I guess collective theories could be used as somewhat of a "basis"--but that's it.



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10 Nov 2014, 11:17 am

kraftiekortie wrote:
The results of this research is true in a collective sense, frequently untrue as to individual people.

I guess collective theories could be used as somewhat of a "basis"--but that's it.

Yes true, but sometimes collective theories can give you more information on the functioning of an isolated individual :)

For example: people with autism in general have difficulties in nonverbal communication, but not all people, only on average.
if you go to an autism school, you can try to use as few as possible nonverbal communication. And you can easily predict (higher chance) that person x has problems with nonverbal communication.

The thing is: each person can have autism traits, whether or not you're autistic.
Autism traits are not only visible in autistic individuals but also nonautistic individuals.



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10 Nov 2014, 11:34 am

I agree with what you stated here.

Immediately previously to this post.