Quantitative Nature of Social Vulnerability and Autism: An Important Paradigm Shift in the DSM-5 for Autism Spectrum Disorder

In the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edition (DSM-IV), autistic characteristics in social interaction and communication are described as qualitative impairments. However, the difference between autistics and nonautistics in the draft of the 5th edition (DSM-5 draft) is q...

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Veröffentlicht in:ISRN neurology 2013-05, Vol.2013, p.201719-5
Hauptverfasser: Ijichi, Shinji, Ijichi, Naomi, Ijichi, Yukina, Hirotaki, Kazumi, Sameshima, Hisami, Kawaike, Yoichi, Morioka, Hirofumi
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container_issue
container_start_page 201719
container_title ISRN neurology
container_volume 2013
creator Ijichi, Shinji
Ijichi, Naomi
Ijichi, Yukina
Hirotaki, Kazumi
Sameshima, Hisami
Kawaike, Yoichi
Morioka, Hirofumi
description In the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edition (DSM-IV), autistic characteristics in social interaction and communication are described as qualitative impairments. However, the difference between autistics and nonautistics in the draft of the 5th edition (DSM-5 draft) is quantitative rather than qualitative. The word “qualitative” is deleted in the draft text, and it is specified that the relation between social demands and individual limited capacities is critical for symptom manifestation (criterion C). Because the proposed levels of support requirement in the draft are mere observable outcomes of social vulnerability, the boundary between level 1 and nonautistic condition is determined by the relation between social demands and individual capacities. In addition to the introduction of the single category (autism spectrum disorder (ASD)) to cover the entire case spectrum, the DSM-5 draft is clearly based on a conviction that ASD is indistinguishable from the normal behavioral range. This concise review provides an explanation for this implicit paradigm shift from qualitative to quantitative. Importantly, the conditional role of social demands for symptom manifestation in the draft can be plausibly interpreted using a unique liability-probability model.
doi_str_mv 10.1155/2013/201719
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title Quantitative Nature of Social Vulnerability and Autism: An Important Paradigm Shift in the DSM-5 for Autism Spectrum Disorder
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