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Re: Research on Asperger's Disorder

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Aspergers disorder?Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless deviceSender: aspires-relationships Date: Wed, 20 Jun 2012 03:26:18 -0000To: <aspires-relationships >ReplyTo: aspires-relationships Subject: Research on Asperger's Disorder Greetings:Just passing this on as requested.Best.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Dear ,Please inform your members that I am conducting research on children who have Asperger's Disorder or High Functioning Autism. The research involves completing a survey on the characteristics of children who have this disorder. I will pay people who participate in this research. For additional information, go to: http://www.jamesegilliam.net. Then click on the link " Asperger's Research. " To go directly to the survey, click on the following link:http://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/944070/Gilliam-Asperger-s-Disorder-Scale-2 E. Gilliam, Ph.D.Author of the Gilliam Asperger's Disorder Scale and the Gilliam Autism Rating Scale

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A lot of disabled people score high in " sense of achievement" and satisfaction. Despite having some fairly severe difficulties. This is thought to correspond to their feelings of contentment to having "overcome" difficulties in their life. 40AS not disordered.Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless deviceSender: aspires-relationships Date: Wed, 20 Jun 2012 11:43:48 -0700To: <aspires-relationships >ReplyTo: aspires-relationships Subject: Re: Research on Asperger's Disorder Aspergers disorder?While that may not be the 'official' name on the books, many of usdo regard our AS as a disorder -- not a gift.Best,~CJ

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Hi ,

In the ICD-10 (used in your part of the world) it's called Asperger Syndrome. In

the DSM-IV (used in North America) it's called Asperger's Disoder.

You may have heard that in the DSM-5 that the Asperger label will be going away,

rolled up into " Autistic disorder. "

http://www.dsm5.org/ProposedRevisions/Pages/proposedrevision.aspx?rid=97

On a related note (related to the subject header)here are a couple of abstracts:

Asperger's syndrome: a comparison of clinical diagnoses and those made according

to the ICD-10 and DSM-IV.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15909409

Comparison of ICD-10 and Gillberg's Criteria for Asperger Syndrome

http://aut.sagepub.com/content/4/1/11.abstract

- Helen

> Aspergers disorder?

>

> -----Original Message-----

>

> Greetings:

>

> Just passing this on as requested.

>

> Best.

>

>

>

> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

>

> Dear ,

>

> Please inform your members that I am conducting research on children who have

Asperger's Disorder or High Functioning Autism. The research involves completing

a survey on the characteristics of children who have this disorder. I will pay

people who participate in this research. For additional information, go to:

http://www.jamesegilliam.net. Then click on the link " Asperger's Research. "

>

> To go directly to the survey, click on the following link:

> http://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/944070/Gilliam-Asperger-s-Disorder-Scale-2

>

> E. Gilliam, Ph.D.

>

> Author of the Gilliam Asperger's Disorder Scale and the Gilliam Autism Rating

Scale

>

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helen, when i left this list 3 years ago i had Aspergers syndrome.Now I return to a new disorder?I thought i was getting better. 40 AS pathologised The information in this document is confidential and is intended solely for the addressee. Access to this document by anyone else is unauthorized. If you are not the intended recipient, any disclosure, copying, distribution or any action taken or omitted to be taken in reliance on it, except for the purpose of delivery to the addressee, is prohibited and may be unlawful. This document and the content remains the

intellectual property of To: aspires-relationships Sent: Wednesday, 20 June 2012, 21:01 Subject: Re: Research on Asperger's Disorder

Hi ,

In the ICD-10 (used in your part of the world) it's called Asperger Syndrome. In the DSM-IV (used in North America) it's called Asperger's Disoder.

You may have heard that in the DSM-5 that the Asperger label will be going away, rolled up into "Autistic disorder." http://www.dsm5.org/ProposedRevisions/Pages/proposedrevision.aspx?rid=97

On a related note (related to the subject header)here are a couple of abstracts:

Asperger's syndrome: a comparison of clinical diagnoses and those made according to the ICD-10 and DSM-IV.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15909409

Comparison of ICD-10 and Gillberg's Criteria for Asperger Syndrome

http://aut.sagepub.com/content/4/1/11.abstract

- Helen

> Aspergers disorder?

>

> -----Original Message-----

>

> Greetings:

>

> Just passing this on as requested.

>

> Best.

>

>

>

> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

>

> Dear ,

>

> Please inform your members that I am conducting research on children who have Asperger's Disorder or High Functioning Autism. The research involves completing a survey on the characteristics of children who have this disorder. I will pay people who participate in this research. For additional information, go to: http://www.jamesegilliam.net. Then click on the link "Asperger's Research."

>

> To go directly to the survey, click on the following link:

> http://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/944070/Gilliam-Asperger-s-Disorder-Scale-2

>

> E. Gilliam, Ph.D.

>

> Author of the Gilliam Asperger's Disorder Scale and the Gilliam Autism Rating Scale

>

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LOL. In the UK you still have Asperger Syndrome :)

- Helen

>

> helen, when i left this list 3 years ago i had Aspergers syndrome.

>

> Now I return to a new disorder?

>

> I thought i was getting better.

>

> 40 AS pathologised

>  

>

>

>

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