Autistic accounts of sensory-perceptual experiences : should we listen?
By: Bogdashina, Olga.
Series: Good Autism Practice 7 (1) 2006: 3-12.Publisher: 2006Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volume Subject(s): AUTISM | SENSORY EXPERIENCE | PERCEPTIONS | BEHAVIOUR ANALYSISSummary: Challenges us to think about how we analyse and interpret the behaviours we see in autistic spectrum disorder (ASD). Argues that many of the behaviours we observe may be a logical response to sensory stimulation, e.g. overload, delayed perception, undersensitivity, and not necessarily attributable to other factors. Covers, inter alia, social interaction, social communication, imagination, sensory overload, fragmented perception, hypersensitivity, hyposensitivity, system shutdown, mono-processing.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Article Research | IHC Library | Article (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available (Article available on request) | W007138 |
Challenges us to think about how we analyse and interpret the behaviours we see in autistic spectrum disorder (ASD). Argues that many of the behaviours we observe may be a logical response to sensory stimulation, e.g. overload, delayed perception, undersensitivity, and not necessarily attributable to other factors. Covers, inter alia, social interaction, social communication, imagination, sensory overload, fragmented perception, hypersensitivity, hyposensitivity, system shutdown, mono-processing.
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