Birth Order
The two most affected members of our AS family are third born and second born respectively.
The first borns
My mother was first born (Aspergers)
I was first born (Aspergers) - my father was 24 when I was born
My first born daughter (Aspergers)
My maternal grandmother (Aspergers)
My first grand-daughter (BAP)
My daughter's fraternal twins, my grandsons (Aspergers)
The second borns
My daughter is NT
My brother - Aspergers
My half sister - Aspergers
My second grand-daughter - Aspergers
The third borns
My father - Aspergers
My paternal uncles - suspected Aspergers
My first grandson - frankly autistic non Aspergers type - his father was 20 when he was born
The fourth borns
My son in law (Aspergers)
My paternal first cousin (Aspergers)
There is no pattern in our family that supports the birth order idea or the older father idea.
Yeah, I didn't get additional education on the subject beyond science and statistics classes in high school.
Regarding googling for the answer before I find my own: yeah, I do that sometimes, but it's not as fun. They usually don't have detailed charts in the articles. (I guess I have to do that anyway. Ho-hum.)
I would say that the self-selection matter is less of an issue when I'm giving surveys, because I don't rely solely on people's willingness to click a survey. I message people and say, "Hey, would you participate in my survey?" (And that's how I got half the responses to my in-progress survey.)
Ah, but it seems my theory is falling apart anyway.
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Logical Sensory Extrovert (ESTj) . Enneagram 1-6-2
Protestant . Female . Asexual . self-diagnosed Aspie
I enjoy charts, knitting, gaming, and interacting with real but atypical people.
There is definitely a link!
I even found some charts.
I'm sorry for doubting the entertainment value of research.
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Logical Sensory Extrovert (ESTj) . Enneagram 1-6-2
Protestant . Female . Asexual . self-diagnosed Aspie
I enjoy charts, knitting, gaming, and interacting with real but atypical people.
I'm not taking the older-father idea seriously, but if you have charts in support of it I'll give them a good look.
The issue I have with it is that it would suggest this to be the result of defective genes, and I see nothing defective about our genes.
The birth-order phenomenon is different. It could have a social reason, or it could have something to do with the mother's womb, but I don't know.
Anyway, I'm satisfied. I got a chart. :p
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Logical Sensory Extrovert (ESTj) . Enneagram 1-6-2
Protestant . Female . Asexual . self-diagnosed Aspie
I enjoy charts, knitting, gaming, and interacting with real but atypical people.
ASPartOfMe
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Joined: 25 Aug 2013
Age: 66
Gender: Male
Posts: 34,406
Location: Long Island, New York
Not only first born of my siblings but first born of all my cousins.
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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
It is Autism Acceptance Month
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
I'm a first-born and the older of two brothers. My younger brother doesn't have an ASD.
I'm inclined to believe, though, that my AS has less to do with me being a first-born and more with the minor complication that occurred during my birth.
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“They laugh at me because I'm different; I laugh at them because they're all the same.”
― Kurt Cobain
The issue I have with it is that it would suggest this to be the result of defective genes, and I see nothing defective about our genes.
The birth-order phenomenon is different. It could have a social reason, or it could have something to do with the mother's womb, but I don't know.
Anyway, I'm satisfied. I got a chart. :p
In general I would agree, but in some cases autism has been linked to certain micro deletions, and in those cases it would make some sense. Also, in regard to older parents, some autistic people can have a harder time finding lasting relationships which could make it take a bit longer in life for AS genes to be passed down.
There is a flaw to trying to figure a common pattern, in that we know that there are multiple 'paths' to autism: inherited or de novo mutations.
More severe forms of autism arise more frequently from de novo mutations, which again correspond to older parental age. But in the cases where there is a longer family history, the mutations appear to be more stable: more likely to be visible in multiple family members and less impairing than that generated de novo.[1].
Birth order would likely to be a significant correlation in the first case, but largely irrelevant in the second -- which will predominate in any informal survey.
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Ceterum autem censeo, Modernismum delendum esse!
Both in terms of mappable genes, and in brain structures, autism has been found to be related to schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. (that does not mean a one to one correspondence; that means a higher incidence than you would find by chance alone.)
So, I wonder if some of the family studies that have been done of family structures and autism, would tell an equally compelling picture if these other diagnoses were also reported (they usually aren't). Indeed, some of the individual responses in this thread reflect the same trend; people mention not only the family members diagnosed with autism but those with other psychiatric disorders.
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A finger in every pie.