sharkattack wrote:
I think each trait or symptom is on a spectrum and that some people with HFA or Aspergers might be quite low functioning in some areas.
I think so, too (and also that if you switch the functioning labels the same can be said about people with LFA). That's a big part of why functioning labels don't make sense. Functioning/ability is not a single thing that is the same for all activities and all contexts (not even for non-autistic people, as far as I know).
sharkattack wrote:
I leave this open to those here better able to explain it.
I think what you said was a good way of putting it. I can't do any better.
In my mind the concept of autism as many spectrums is a rainbow colored koosh-ball-like thing. All the spines of the koosh-ball-like thing are like floppy sticks that are fused together where they intersect at their midpoints. Each stick is a different color and represents the spectrum of one autistic symptom/trait/issue from end to end.... The whole thing is sort of like a 3-D map, where you can mark your place on each of the symptom/trait/issue spectrums with a glowing dot or a line. (There's a second version that's a regular koosh ball where each floppy spine sticking out from the ball represents the spectrum of one symptom/issue/trait, starting from the base of the spine and moving outward instead of intersecting the middle of the sphere. It changes the concept a bit, the way I think about it, but not the most important parts.)
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