Any PhD students here?
I'm starting an MA program in history this fall (and intend to get my PhD after that, probably six or seven years total). I've always done very well at school, though I work slowly and process information more slowly than most of my peers so timed tests and the like have always been a struggle. Since an early age I realized that I can memorize information easily and so I've used that to try to compensate for my general slowness. I didn't even know about Asperger's until about a year ago so I've had do make do without disability accommodation. I'm not sure if a diagnosis would behoove me in grad school (my school counselors seem pretty sure that I have it and that a diagnosis probably wouldn't tell me anything that I don't already know).
At any rate, my professors generally like me and think highly of my ability to succeed; I had one who told me that academia is one of the few places where the characteristics of Asperger's are actually beneficial. When I explained how it is much easier for me to work with written rather than spoken material, he replied how in history it is necessary to be able to devote a great of time to working with texts. Reflecting on my own past I think that my unrelenting obsession with Japanese history has been invaluable to me as a motivating force. It's driven me to do some really difficult and onerous things, like leaving home for the first time to study Japanese in Japan--taking intensive classes that amounted to three years worth of study in about one year. One of my Japanese instructors said she had never had a student who worked as hard as I did. This tendency can also work to my detriment as I often push myself too hard and don't know when to give myself a break. I'm currently on anxiety medication to try to lessen the "I need to study until I die of exhaustion" proclivity. In general I'm glad that I am the way I am and it looks like things are going to work out for me in terms of my long-term goal of getting a doctorate. I've been able to get into a school that grants teaching fellowships for six years and I've also received an FLAS for my interest in Asian languages and history (paying my tuition and fees and giving me a stipend to live on).
