I thought I’d share the image below, which expresses a summary of autistic neurology from Annie Kotowicz on facebook.

The author elsewhere describes her favourite way to think of autism as: ‘I miss what others catch and catch what others miss.’ That is one of the best descriptions I have ever heard and wonderfully captures the reality of autism, without falling for a deficit-focused model.

In the post which accompanies the image, Kotowicz writes:

The more you learn about autistic brains, the easier it is to understand autistic behaviors. So, here’s a brief intro to autistic neurology!

MISSING WHAT OTHERS CATCH:

In autistic brains, some neural pathways are weaker. This can make it harder to notice implications, expectations, facial expressions, and body language.

CATCHING WHAT OTHERS MISS:

In autistic brains, some neural pathways are stronger. This can make it easier to notice errors, patterns, sights, sounds, textures, pain, and beauty.

FOCUS ON DETAILS FIRST:

Autistic brains tend to gather details before drawing a conclusion, and we’re less likely to jump to conclusions based on intuition alone. This often makes us less biased, but worse at figuring out what others consider relevant.

FOCUS ON ONE THING AT A TIME:

Autistic brains naturally slip into intense focus, not shifting quickly from one thought to another. This can be pleasant and productive, but also makes it hard to multitask or face interruptions.

EVERYTHING IS MORE INTENSE:

Autistic brains take in a lot of information at once, especially sensory information. This can feel overwhelming and difficult to process. Autistic movements are often an attempt to help our bodies feel more grounded.

EVERYTHING IS MORE SURPRISING:

Autistic brains make fewer predictions about what will happen next. We take life as it comes, and it often comes too fast to handle. Sometimes we react in ways that anyone would under stress. Plans and routines reduce that stress by making life more predictable.

This is all taken from the book, What I Mean When I Say I’m Autistic: Unpuzzling a Life on the Autism Spectrum, which I thoroughly recommend.