Autism Umbrella Chart

Hi

Im an autistic woman with 6 ASD children.  Recently my 16 year old daughter was diagnosed and she asked me if she was mild autism or high functioning.

I tried to explain to her that it doesn’t work like that really but she didn’t understand and so I made this chart link below.

www.chatterpack.net 

Its totally free and I’m not a business or anything but other people have found it useful so I thought I’d share with you all as it’s here that I learnt about autism when I was first diagnosed.

I hope that it’s helpful to someone 

thanks 

Parents
  • I've only just come back to this thread and realised that you made it yourself rather than finding it somewhere - great work!

    At the moment I'm quite fascinated by how autism affects people differently, and it staggers me that no research has identified "clusters" or profiles within autism where groups of autistic people experience "similar - ish" effects. The only paper I've read that comes close to this concludes that there are exactly two clusters, corresponding to "high impact" and "low impact" and notes that these don't correlate with any existing or previous diagnostic labels such as Asperger or HFA etc.

    I'd also be fascinated to see a chart that identifies autistic effects as distinct from the effects of co-morbid conditions, as I think this would provide the basis for a clear explainer that increases understanding for everyone.

    Also (obvs) I want to understand my own profile.

    I've often wondered about someone setting up something on the web that everyone could contribute to - like a big version of your chart with a row per person and a "H/M/L" or "3/2/1" entry for each effect, anonimous of course, but with identifiers for what diagnosis the person has been given (including co-morbids, and none at all) - I'd love to see this with several thousand rows and play at cluster analysis with it! What stops me doing this myself is that I don't know how, and I don't know how to handle the data protection and ethical aspects.

    Here's a mind map I made ages ago trying to capture all of the possible impacts (it is still work in progress).

Reply
  • I've only just come back to this thread and realised that you made it yourself rather than finding it somewhere - great work!

    At the moment I'm quite fascinated by how autism affects people differently, and it staggers me that no research has identified "clusters" or profiles within autism where groups of autistic people experience "similar - ish" effects. The only paper I've read that comes close to this concludes that there are exactly two clusters, corresponding to "high impact" and "low impact" and notes that these don't correlate with any existing or previous diagnostic labels such as Asperger or HFA etc.

    I'd also be fascinated to see a chart that identifies autistic effects as distinct from the effects of co-morbid conditions, as I think this would provide the basis for a clear explainer that increases understanding for everyone.

    Also (obvs) I want to understand my own profile.

    I've often wondered about someone setting up something on the web that everyone could contribute to - like a big version of your chart with a row per person and a "H/M/L" or "3/2/1" entry for each effect, anonimous of course, but with identifiers for what diagnosis the person has been given (including co-morbids, and none at all) - I'd love to see this with several thousand rows and play at cluster analysis with it! What stops me doing this myself is that I don't know how, and I don't know how to handle the data protection and ethical aspects.

    Here's a mind map I made ages ago trying to capture all of the possible impacts (it is still work in progress).

Children
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