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* "the content of participants' conversations felt formal to an outside observer." | * "the content of participants' conversations felt formal to an outside observer." | ||
== Autistic behaviors == | == Autistic behaviors == | ||
Contrarily to what some media claim, being autistic does not mean being very intelligent; intellingence and autism ae two diferent things. | Contrarily to what some media claim, being autistic does not mean being very intelligent; intellingence and autism ae two diferent things. If you are an incel, it is a possibility it is due to some autistic behaviour; the fact normies like to claim they are autistic or have such or such mental illnesses to get some attention does not mean those mental conditions do not exist. Besides, you probably already know that you are not like the normies, that something is different with you and the falsely mentally ill posers. | ||
The following symptomes are considered autistic. Health professionals tend to distance themselves from categorising someone as autistic due to the complexity of this condition. Rather, they use a list of autistic behaviors whose importance vary depending on their classification and severity; they then put the person on the autistic spectrum depending on the severity or number of said behaviors to classify the person as ''more'' or ''less'' autistic. | The following symptomes are considered autistic. Health professionals tend to distance themselves from categorising someone as autistic due to the complexity of this condition. Rather, they use a list of autistic behaviors whose importance vary depending on their classification and severity; they then put the person on the autistic spectrum depending on the severity or number of said behaviors to classify the person as ''more'' or ''less'' autistic. | ||
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</ref> | </ref> | ||
*Frequent synesthesia<ref>[https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02643294.2020.1808455 Synaesthesia and autism: Different developmental outcomes from overlapping mechanisms?]</ref> | *Frequent synesthesia<ref>[https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02643294.2020.1808455 Synaesthesia and autism: Different developmental outcomes from overlapping mechanisms?]</ref> | ||
*Caring more about how you feel in your clothes than how people will perceive them,<ref>[https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10803-021-05140-3 Clothes, Sensory Experiences and Autism: Is Wearing the Right Fabric Important?]</ref> keeping or wanting to keep the same clothes all the time, even if it means freezing or sweating<ref>[https://www.autismspeaks.org/science-blog/autism-and-resistance-change-winter-summer-clothes Autism and resistance to the change from winter to summer clothes] </ref> | |||
=== Food and drugs === | === Food and drugs === | ||
*For children, strong negative reaction to some food of odors (seen a being "picky")<ref name=":0" /><ref>[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3601920/ Food selectivity and sensory sensitivity in children with autism spectrum disorders] | *For children, strong negative reaction to some food of odors (seen a being "picky")<ref name=":0" /><ref>[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3601920/ Food selectivity and sensory sensitivity in children with autism spectrum disorders] |