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Autism Reversed in Mice at MIT Lab

ClayTapes writes "It seems that scientists at MIT have been able to reverse the effects of autism and some forms of mental retardation in mice caused by fragile X chromosomes. They do so by targeting an enzyme that changes the structure of connections between brain cells. The treatment actually repairs these structural abnormalities which suggests that it may be possible to reverse the effects in children who already show symptoms."

303 comments

  1. Amazingly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    The mice are still not talking... except for one.

    1. Re:Amazingly by Ub3rT3Rr0R1St · · Score: 4, Funny

      Rain Mouse!

    2. Re:Amazingly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      yeah, but that one became the US president 7 years ago. And it still does not make sense when talking.

    3. Re:Amazingly by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1, Funny

      I'd respond to this, but it's time for Wopnar.

    4. Re:Amazingly by fohat · · Score: 5, Funny

      Rain Mouse is two words...
      definitely...
      definitely two words...

      --
      Is there heaven? Is there Hell? Is that a Tuna Melt I smell?-Primus
    5. Re:Amazingly by Mix+Master+Nixon · · Score: 5, Informative

      I assume you mean Wapner. Wopnar is the evil robotic syndicated TV judge from the future. He is without mercy, and his appearance in our time is a horrifying warning to us all.

      --
      Oppressing an entire population is never cheap.
      --Jeckler (/. Beta IS GARBAGE!)
    6. Re:Amazingly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The mice are still not talking... except for one.


      Mostly because they don't want anyone to know that they shop at K-Mart.
    7. Re:Amazingly by coren2000 · · Score: 1

      ROFLMAO : Oh how I wish I had some mod points for this

    8. Re:Amazingly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      stupid mods on crack again. It's topic-relevant joke, dumbasses.

    9. Re:Amazingly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I, for one, welcome him.

    10. Re:Amazingly by sharkey · · Score: 1

      Has to be Mr. Ages, since Jonathan Frisby is dead, right?

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    11. Re:Amazingly by morethanapapercert · · Score: 1

      Algernon!
      Nicodemus!
      Pinky!

      --
      I need a wheelchair van for my son. Help me get the word out. https://www.gofundme.com/wheelchair-van-for-jj
    12. Re:Amazingly by llamaxing · · Score: 1

      One of the mice was recently discovered missing, but he did leave a letter behind. Here's a snippet of that letter:

      Our relationship is becoming increasingly strained. I resent Nemur's constant references to me as a laboratory specimen. He makes me feel that before the experiment was not really a [mouse].
      ...
      P.S. please if you get a chanse put some flowrs on Algernons grave in the bak yard."


      (for those who don't get the joke, read Flowers for Algernon; and yes, it relates to the article)

    13. Re:Amazingly by phreakincool · · Score: 0

      Its a good thing you are AC, you cocksucker! My son suffers from autism.

    14. Re:Amazingly by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 1

      Calm down man, don't take everything on the internet personally.
      Autism of a child (or anyone) is a serious thing, we all know that (well most of us).

      The first thing I thought when reading the headline, that it would be fantastic of autism (and after reading the blurb) other mental defects could be cured.

      You could have a normal relationship with your son for instance, look him in the eye and let him recognise you (I don't know the degree of your sons autism).

      All the best for you and your family (I know I'm praying for a cure and I'm in no way affected by autism)

      --
      This is the sig that says NI (again)
    15. Re:Amazingly by Gription · · Score: 1

      No...

      Brain!

    16. Re:Amazingly by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      And he has such a nice, understanding, even-tempered father to help him deal with it...

    17. Re:Amazingly by inKubus · · Score: 1

      Or perhaps WOPR. Would you like to play a game?

      --
      Cool! Amazing Toys.
  2. Definitely by Bombula · · Score: 1

    This is definitely a good thing. Definitely. Definitely.

    --
    A-Bomb
    1. Re:Definitely by Ancient_Hacker · · Score: 2, Informative
      Wow!

      Although.... I've read that a disappointing percentage of drugs that work really well in mice don't in men.

    2. Re:Definitely by DrLov3 · · Score: 1

      Maybe they'll be able to reverse Ballmer's autism soon enough, at least we hope before he decides to delete all hotmail accounts due to revenue issues or whatever.

      Developpers, developpers, developpers .....

    3. Re:Definitely by misleb · · Score: 0

      Ballmer is autistic too? I thought it was just Mr. Gates.

      -matthew

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    4. Re:Definitely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, no, not Gates, or Jobs, or even Woz. It's Draper.

    5. Re:Definitely by BlueLightSpecial · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Excellent to hear, I know of a family that has an autistic set of twins, but I'm not sure if it is caused by the weak X syndrome, that only accounts for a certain amount of autism cases, regardless, I've seen what it's like to live with autistic children, it is not an easy life

    6. Re:Definitely by sjames · · Score: 5, Interesting

      What I really wonder about is the converse. How many highly useful (in humans) drugs have been abandoned at an early stage because they had no effect on mice.

      It's interesting that LSD was thought to have little more than a very mild stimulant effect (and had been abandoned in favor of more promising lysergic acid compounds) until Hoffman got some of it on him and took the first acid trip. Apparently either it's not all that apparent when a mouse is tripping or mice don't trip.

      He was looking for a better medication to stop uterine bleeding.

      See this.

      I wonder what other "uninteresting" substances have been ignored because they don't happen to have any effect on humans in microgram doses and don't effect mice in any dosage.

      Unfortunatly, there's no much of a solution to that since we can't have people randomly ingesting chemical experiments just to see.

    7. Re:Definitely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      at least we hope before he decides to delete all hotmail accounts

      Umm.... Ok Yeah, that would be a disaster: Where would all the spam go?

    8. Re:Definitely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only way LSD can effect mice is if it makes mommy mice and daddy mice very horny. Based on my experiences with LSD, I suppose this wasn't really a correction.

    9. Re:Definitely by cp.tar · · Score: 1

      Unfortunatly, there's no much of a solution to that since we can't have people randomly ingesting chemical experiments just to see.

      Sure we can.

      Give it to kids. Say it's a new drug.

      --
      Ignore this signature. By order.
    10. Re:Definitely by dosquatch · · Score: 3, Funny

      Unfortunatly, there's no much of a solution to that since we can't have people randomly ingesting chemical experiments just to see.

      You've never been to a frat party, have you?

      --
      "Hey, the third matrix movie would have been good except for the plot,story, and acting." --AC
    11. Re:Definitely by dosquatch · · Score: 1

      Developers, developers, developers...

      No, no, that's Tourette.

      --
      "Hey, the third matrix movie would have been good except for the plot,story, and acting." --AC
    12. Re:Definitely by god4twenty · · Score: 1

      That's interesting, although how does one know when a mouse is tripping? The only apparent effect we can observe is mild stimulation while unbeknown to us the mouse is trippin balls.

    13. Re:Definitely by NewsWatcher · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I remember reading that penicillin is toxic to guinea pigs, so if that had been tested on them instead of mice, it would probably have never been released.

      --
      If the pattern goes 9am, 10am, 11am, why isn't noon 12am?
    14. Re:Definitely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why the fuck not? We do it to mice and dogs and chimps. Humans ARE NOT GODS. Time to give up the ghost and realize that the ONLY valuable test to the human animal is a test ON the human animal. Someone somewhere is willing.

      anonymous coward post - GO!

    15. Re:Definitely by Charcharodon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That is kind of like how the artificial sweetener Saccharin got pulled from the shelves over a decade ago after they found it caused cancer in mice. It turns out to get the equivalent dosage into humans as they were giving the lab mice, one would have to have eaten 15lbs of Saccharin every day. Once this came to light they redid the tests at normal levels with both mice and primates, it still ended up causing cancer in mice, but only in mice, it had no affect on the primates.

    16. Re:Definitely by suv4x4 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunatly, there's no much of a solution to that since we can't have people randomly ingesting chemical experiments just to see.

      Or.. can we? Muahahahaha!

      Regards, Dr. Mengele

    17. Re:Definitely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      "Apparently either it's not all that apparent when a mouse is tripping or mice don't trip."

      Maybe they trip just like humans:

      "Whoa! That cheese is giggling! Ah! My cage is melting! OK, keep cool! Here comes the guy in the white coat. Don't act fried. Try to act normal. Don't act fried."

    18. Re:Definitely by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      But mice and dogs do have many analogous responses to most things as humans, and they reproduce a hell of a lot faster than humans, and you can breed them so that they exhibit special traits. None of which are possible with humans.

      But that's ok, keep it up with your atheistic, pointless anti-humanist posturing. It's amusing :)

    19. Re:Definitely by shaitand · · Score: 1

      'Unfortunatly, there's no much of a solution to that since we can't have people randomly ingesting chemical experiments just to see.'

      I fail to see why not, we don't exactly have a people shortage. There is no ethical dillema if the people are willing and informed (or are 6 or less and have a willing guardian, older than that and they may not be coherent enough to say yes but they are definately coherent enough to say no). Personally I recommend trials in Asia. I hear they have something of a population issue there.

      Here is a tip, pay them.

    20. Re:Definitely by shaitand · · Score: 1

      'None of which are possible with humans'

      Almost, it might take longer to mature them but you can grow humans with special traits as well. You would have saved a substantial amount of time if you had bred humans and matured them 6 years and tested this on them in the first place. You could skip all the nonsense and just continue dosing and monitoring for long term trials.

      'atheistic'

      You say that like it's a bad thing.

      'But mice and dogs do have many analogous responses to most things as humans'

      And they have just as many responses that are NOT analogous to humans. People are sometimes surprised to discover the veterinary medications are mostly the same ones used for humans. They are handed that analogous responses jazz as the reason but it isn't true. The reason isn't that we share responses, the reason is that the drugs were tested on the animals before us. There are likely many miracle drugs hiding that have no impact on lab animals.

      Personally, I fail to see an ethical dilemma in testing on consenting adults. There are an abundance of them in Asia. In fact, if you accept a double consent from both parent and child you might save the lives of many female children in asia... suddenly they could become quite valuable.

    21. Re:Definitely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was looking for a better medication to stop uterine bleeding.

      I'm going to guess it didn't work for him.

      Talk about worst excuse ever.

    22. Re:Definitely by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      6 years != adult. You haven't really thought out what you are saying.

      There's a reason they don't let you direct the research. It's because you're an idiot.

    23. Re:Definitely by shaitand · · Score: 1

      'It's because you're an idiot.'

      I've yet to meet anyone who goes around calling others idiots who isn't an idiot.

      '6 years != adult. You haven't really thought out what you are saying.'

      Or maybe I've thought it out a bit further than you? You seem awefully cocky for someone who failed to say five words without some sort false logic or arrogant assumption.

      6 years is not an adult but human children respond in essentially the same way as human adults (albeit at different dosages but that is a matter of body weight). At six years of age you can conclusively diagnose autism and the subjects can explain what is happening to them in a reasonable fashion. Fortunately it is also before the potential hormonal problems in the teen years that could conflict with your results.

      Of course you would need to wait until they are 12 years old if you need your subjects to reproduce for any reason.

  3. Holy shit by realmolo · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Okay, that's pretty amazing.

  4. Nice article by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1, Funny

    There is hope for us yet.

    Did you know, there are 773 words on that article page.

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
  5. Now all we need by also-rr · · Score: 4, Funny

    Is a drug that turns people into mice and 99% of diseases will be a solved problem.

    1. Re:Now all we need by Tackhead · · Score: 5, Funny
      > Is a drug that turns people into mice and 99% of diseases will be a solved problem.

      "Stop giving away our plans, Pinky, or I shall have to hurt you."

    2. Re:Now all we need by cosinezero · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Except cancer.

    3. Re:Now all we need by misleb · · Score: 1

      Just stop feeding them insane amounts of saccharin. There. 100% solved.

      -matthew

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    4. Re:Now all we need by fishthegeek · · Score: 1

      Brilliantly funny.

      --
      load "$",8,1
    5. Re:Now all we need by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Well, If you read between the lines on this, it shows that once the damage is done, it can still be repaired in some cases. I think we will eventually find most if not all cases. My understanding is that cells split and renew themselves, if you take whatever is causing the danger or mutation away from the cell, it may divide back into normally functioning cells for all intents and purposes.

      I understand the concept you were conveying. But the bigger picture is, if we can pull this idea or concept into humans, it might not be far from a cure for cancer (some some types of cancer). I know it is a stretch, but one I think is worth exploring.

    6. Re:Now all we need by cafucu · · Score: 2, Insightful

      OK, Brain. ZOT!!!!

      --
      :%s:work:/.:g
    7. Re:Now all we need by mattsucks · · Score: 1

      Is a drug that turns people into mice and 99% of diseases will be a solved problem.

      Are you kidding? Mice die from EVERYTHING! Don't you ever read medical research?

    8. Re:Now all we need by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      narf!

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    9. Re:Now all we need by kalirion · · Score: 1

      "Just once I would like to see a headline that said, "SCIENTISTS DISCOVER A CURE FOR HUMAN DIABETES," followed by details that say, "Scientists caution that this treatment in mice would give them inverted erections and make them hump themselves to death."" -- Scott Adams

  6. great by Lord+Ender · · Score: 3, Funny

    Just being small and furry makes it hard for mice to socialize at parties. I can't even imagine how hard it would be for an autistic mouse.

    --
    A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    1. Re:great by jollyreaper · · Score: 4, Funny

      Just being small and furry makes it hard for mice to socialize at parties. I can't even imagine how hard it would be for an autistic mouse. Well, it could be worse. They could be partying with Richard Gere.
      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    2. Re:great by jollyreaper · · Score: 4, Funny

      Just being small and furry makes it hard for mice to socialize at parties. I can't even imagine how hard it would be for an autistic mouse. Well, it could be worse. They could be partying with Richard Gere. Flamebait? Who modded me down, a jealous gerbil?
      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    3. Re:great by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

      Well, on the internet, nobody knows that you are a mouse, so don't worry about it...

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    4. Re:great by FecesFlingingRhesus · · Score: 1

      No I think the moderation was in reference to the mouse.

  7. This is good news by zoomshorts · · Score: 1

    I hope further research enable the technique to be used on humans.

    News That Matters.

    1. Re:This is good news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (Score:-1, No shit)

  8. Misleading by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 4, Informative

    They are not sure what causes most forms of autism. The fragile X disease is something in it's own category.

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    1. Re:Misleading by N3WBI3 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Its a grant ploy, similar to the sales ploy used by guardisil (sp) which does not prevent all of the HPV nor all the subset of HPV that causes cervical cancer but if we say this stops cancer we can get states ot mandate it for grade school girls. Both things are good (mitigating the effects of hanging x and preventing hpv) but neither is the solution as advertised..

      --
    2. Re:Misleading by mehemiah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is a very good point. The symptoms of the Autism spectrum are exhibited through social interaction, i don't think we understand the social habits of mice well enough to say if we have actually cured it in the specimen.

    3. Re:Misleading by TheMeuge · · Score: 1

      Absolutely...

      Autism is a syndrome, which can be caused by a number of underlying conditions, most of which remain elusive thus far. Fragile-X is just too easy and crude of a model.

    4. Re:Misleading by Repossessed · · Score: 1

      A minority (I think it's 5 or 10 percent or around that, very low overall) of cases of autism are caused by fragile X, but it does happen, this treatment would apply only to those few.

      --
      Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite (TM)
    5. Re:Misleading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are not sure what causes most forms of autism. The fragile X disease is something in it's own category. Exactly, there is no way to diagnose autism in mice.

      I could easily be diagnosed as autistic myself, however I do not go to the doctor, thus avoiding a whole host of illnesses and saving much money.

      I look at things pretty simplistically; when life stops hurting, that means it is over.
    6. Re:Misleading by MagicDude · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You speak as if any treatment that is less than 100% is worthless. Gardisil which immunizes against HPV strains 16 and 18 will act against strains which prevent 60 to 70 percent of cervical cancer. According to your logic, it's not worth immunizing people against polio, because it doesn't protect against 100% of causes of paralysis.

    7. Re:Misleading by N3WBI3 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      No I act as if any drug pushed as a panicea against a particular disease is a bad thing because its misinformation.. Gardisil: http://www.consultwebs.com/gardasil-HPV-lawsuits.h tml is being pushed despite the fact it is not been tested for any appreciable period of time because the commercials say '1 less' even though It could be one more. Great publicity..

      --
  9. mice bred with autism? by freg · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm curious, how do u get a bunch of mice who are autistic to test? Do they make them this way through breeding or do they check thousands of mice brains to find the one poor mouse with autism? As far as I know there's no way to give something autism.

    1. Re:mice bred with autism? by N3WBI3 · · Score: 4, Informative

      The autism they are dealing with is from hanging 'x' syndrome all you need to do is find a female who is trait positive (has on malformed x) and breed her. 50% of her male offspring will have the condition. You can, through trial and error, get a female with the condition by then using that male and a trait positive female (but not the mother thats icky). All of *that* females male offspring will have the condition. This is not an autism cure it is a cure for a 'type' of autism.

      --
    2. Re:mice bred with autism? by Otter · · Score: 3, Informative

      You could do that, but they were actually using an engineered mouse strain with the FMR1 gene knocked out.

    3. Re:mice bred with autism? by N3WBI3 · · Score: 1
      Bah thats not science! Not fun science anyway...

      Now go and get my mouse a doll house bedroom set, light the candles, put on some soft jazz and load up the water bottle with covasie!

      --
    4. Re:mice bred with autism? by PIPBoy3000 · · Score: 1

      The autism they are dealing with is from hanging 'x' syndrome all you need to do is find a female who is trait positive (has on malformed x) and breed her.

      I keep trying to breed with a trait positive female mouse, but after a few drinks all she wants to do is run around on her wheel. What am I doing wrong?

    5. Re:mice bred with autism? by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 1

      That is wrong on so many levels... Sir, I commend you.

    6. Re:mice bred with autism? by hondo77 · · Score: 1

      I'm curious, how do u get a bunch of mice who are autistic to test?

      You throw mice parties. Look for the mice along the walls that aren't talking to the other mice. Those are your autistic mice.

      --
      I live ze unknown. I love ze unknown. I am ze unknown.
  10. Daniel Benoit by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1, Informative

    There have been reports that Daniel Benoit, the 7-year-old boy murdered by his pro-wrestler father Chris Benoit over the weekend, suffered from fragile X syndrome.

    While it would be irresponsible to speculate whether the boy's (unconfirmed) condition had any relation to the horrible acts... I'll do it anyway, because I'll be damned if the media's speculation that Chris had "roid rage" was any less irresponsible or harmful.

    If Chris Benoit took his son's life because he felt it was more merciful than allowing to live with this condition, it is an awful, awful irony that news of hope of a cure has come so immediately after the tragedy.

    1. Re:Daniel Benoit by Skyshadow · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If Chris Benoit took his son's life because he felt it was more merciful than allowing to live with this condition,

      Right. And what condition was his wife living with when he strangled her the night before again?

      --
      Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    2. Re:Daniel Benoit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right. And what condition was his wife living with when he strangled her the night before again?

      PMS.

    3. Re:Daniel Benoit by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 1

      A woman is bound at the hands and feet, pushed face down into the floor with a knee in her back and is strangled until dead.

      Ho ho... Yes, PMS... You fucking shithead. A mother and child were violently murdered. Show some fucking respect.

      I was a fan of Benoit's for ten years. Now all I can say is fuck Chris Benoit. I don't subscribe to the notion of heaven and hell, but times like now make me hope there is such a thing, because that psychopathic piece of shit deserves everything Satan has in store for him.

    4. Re:Daniel Benoit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i congradulate chris benoit in retiring with the "i killed my whole family belt". women and children are overrated.

    5. Re:Daniel Benoit by Footix · · Score: 1

      You know, when I saw this article on the main page, that was the first thing I thought of as well. (And in the interest of disclosure, I am a Benoit fan who still thinks something doesn't quite add up here)

      --
      Footix - President, Society For Putting Things On Top Of Other Things
    6. Re:Daniel Benoit by AdamWeeden · · Score: 1

      No clear link exists as of now, but current reports show that there was some friction between Benoit and his wife due to the high demand of caring for their child.

      --
      I was quoted out of context in my autobiography...
  11. Not misleading, but narrow scope by arth1 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Also, gender chromosome related conditions are almost exclusive to men, whether the defect is on the X or the Y chromosome (the reason being that women have two X chromosomes, and a healthy one will usually mask the damaged one). So this might have some impact on treatment of certain types of male autism. Yes, that may be a narrow scope, but it's better than no scope at all.

    Regards,
    --
    *Art

    1. Re:Not misleading, but narrow scope by xero314 · · Score: 1

      gender chromosome related conditions are almost exclusive to men It would be better put to say that chromosome related conditions are predominantly apparent in males. There are Fragile X females, but they tend to have symptoms to a much lesser degree unless they had both a fragile X father and mother. The interesting thing is that this process that reduces the symptoms of Fragile X syndrome will actually make Dual Fragile X females more likely as Fragile X males will receive more opportunities to reproduces, having more societally acceptable traits.
    2. Re:Not misleading, but narrow scope by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As far as I know the following abnormality isn't observed in autistic people:

      People with Fragile X Syndrome have more dendritic spines than usual, but each is longer and thinner, and transmits weaker electric signals.

      The only similarity is that fragile X syndrome has autism like symptoms. A bladder infection may give you the same symptoms as prostate cancer, but are entirely different.

      --
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    3. Re:Not misleading, but narrow scope by morari · · Score: 1

      Obviously we should be working on phasing out the entire male gender then instead of wasting time on workarounds. Take care of the problem, not the symptoms!

      --
      "He who can destroy a thing, controls a thing." --Paul Atreides, Dune
    4. Re:Not misleading, but narrow scope by mmortal03 · · Score: 1

      Some researchers and/or theorists have thought that autism (even in women) could be this hyper or over masculinization of thought or cognition, meaning that if what you, this, and they say holds true, it might not be of such a narrow scope.

    5. Re:Not misleading, but narrow scope by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Even our genes are prolific risk takers. "I store my data like I store my genes, baby -- I keep no backups, but I give away copies for free! Woo!"

    6. Re:Not misleading, but narrow scope by triffid_98 · · Score: 1
      Um, you do know that 3 out of 4 people diagnosed with autism are male, right?

      Also, gender chromosome related conditions are almost exclusive to men, whether the defect is on the X or the Y chromosome (the reason being that women have two X chromosomes, and a healthy one will usually mask the damaged one). So this might have some impact on treatment of certain types of male autism
  12. Sounds familiar by u8i9o0 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Was the first mouse treated named Algernon?

    Maybe we should wait for any long term effects before celebrating.

    --
    This is not my sig
    1. Re:Sounds familiar by tcc3 · · Score: 1

      It took far too long for an Algernon reference. Thank you.

  13. Further information by Jaqenn · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's some information for those of you interested. I'm not an authority on this, except that I once did a 6 minute presentation for one of my biology classes.

    Some researchers believe that autism causes it's havoc by interfering with the brains ability to prune existing connections between neurons. This is also pointed at as the reason that many autistic children appear normal for the first X months of development...they have to build up enough neurons linked to everything else before they lose the ability to function.

    For the same reason, many believe that treatments that restore the brains ability to prune those connections could restore normal function to people with autism, even if they are already adults.

    Joyous times, indeed.

    --
    You are awash in a sea of fiercely stated opinions. Obvious exits are: 'File->Quit', 'Reply', and 'Page Down'.
    1. Re:Further information by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'm not an authority on this, except that I once did a 6 minute presentation for one of my biology classes. On the Slashdot scale, that makes you a Doctor of Autistic Studies.

      --
      I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
    2. Re:Further information by Smight · · Score: 1

      So you're saying autism can be cured with brain damage?

      I smell a new legal defense for assault with a hammer.

      --
      IOU one (1) signature
    3. Re:Further information by arbitraryaardvark · · Score: 1

      Autism is a spectrum.
      extrovert... "normal"... introvert... geek... slashdot reader ...AHDH... asperger's syndrome ... mild autism ...full-on autism.
      2009: "Autism cured, Slashdot readership plummets."

    4. Re:Further information by PCM2 · · Score: 1

      Actually, this topic is a unique case. As it turns out, there are people on Slashdot with multiple degrees in autism.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    5. Re:Further information by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1

      > Some researchers believe that autism causes it's havoc by interfering with the brains ability to prune existing connections between neurons So why do people with autistic have such *specific* disorders, such as problems with modeling other minds? This sounds like the biological equivalent of claiming some bug is caused by "a C++ function computing some binary digits incorrectly".

      --
      Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
    6. Re:Further information by hehman · · Score: 1

      So where am I on the spectrum if I point out that you meant to type ADHD, not "AHDH"?

    7. Re:Further information by LParks · · Score: 1

      That idea would, on the surface, seem to be consistent with certain Autistic traits, such as being able to memorize a phone book. All the information is "linked," and never "unlinked." Whereas unimportant information is typically discarded quickly among non-Autistics.

    8. Re:Further information by TriezGamer · · Score: 1

      Anal retentive

    9. Re:Further information by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      You're on Slashdot, aren't you?

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
  14. Finally by katterjohn · · Score: 2, Funny

    We've been needing some of that down here in the South for a looong time...

  15. Oh yeah it's just a pill by Arthur+B. · · Score: 3, Funny

    but then in the morning you find yourself unable to count matches spilled on the floor, break the bank playing blackjack and eventually communicate with the objects around you. Beware, beware.

    --
    \u262D = \u5350
  16. Oh no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What will 75% of kuro5hins readers use as a blank check now?

  17. Reference by Otter · · Score: 2, Informative
    The paper seems to be this. (It's freely accessible but I'm not going to fry the PNAS site by directly linking a PDF.)

    One thing to note is that this isn't a drug; it's a dominant negative transgene, so you're not going to popping pills for this any time soon.

    1. Re:Reference by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      One thing to note is that this isn't a drug; it's a dominant negative transgene, so you're not going to popping pills for this any time soon. I bet that didn't stop Keith Richards from getting high on it during the 1970s...
      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
  18. Mr. Ages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where is Mr. Ages?

  19. A tragic end by CrashPoint · · Score: 2, Funny

    Sadly, the project was cut short when the mice intentionally reversed the treatments, having found themselves unable to relate to their newly-lovestruck trainers.

    1. Re:A tragic end by Ub3rT3Rr0R1St · · Score: 1

      Some cheese for Algernon?

  20. Always the mice, lucky bastards by kalirion · · Score: 1

    Why is it that all the good things happen to mice? I have to agree with Scott Adams' views on this one.

  21. No vaccinations? by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

    So did they stop giving them shots with thimerosal?

    --
    I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
    1. Re:No vaccinations? by Choad+Namath · · Score: 1

      Or maybe they just told them they stopped, seems like it would work with most of those vaccine nuts.

    2. Re:No vaccinations? by misterplow · · Score: 0, Troll
      Many parents give testimonials that their children were "made" autistic through mercury poisoning. Where did the mercury come from? The most easily-discoverable source of a relatively large influx of mercury is through the preservative Thimerosal (used in vaccines).

      If you want to hear the parents' side of the "does mercury in vaccines cause autism?" debate, PLEASE PLEASE visit the website http://www.generationrescue.org/ There are links to testimonial videos which show before and after footage of children who were deemed to be (sometimes profoundly) autistic, but then after the mercury and other heavy metals came out of their children's body (through chelation), the results are absolutely incredible.

      The "experts" who dismiss Thimerosal as a causative agent in autism may have their points, but you can NOT dispute the video footage. And if you are a parent of a child who shows symptoms of autism (which overlap almost exactly with symptoms of mercury poisoning), and then that child comes back to the point where he/she is "recovered" through biomedical intervention -- there is nothing that the naysayers can say which will convince you that it is all about genetics, etc.

      What almost everybody can agree on is that . . . nobody agrees on the cause of autism. However, I have found that http://www.generationrescue.org/ is a very persuasive source of information about the autism debate. Please read and decide for yourself.

  22. Hope for autustic mice exists by gavinjolly · · Score: 1

    I for one am very happy to know that there is hope for Autistic mice.

    When will the treatment be available in pet shops.

    --

    The weathers here - Wish you were beautiful

  23. Clap Clap Applaud Applaud by Doug+Dante · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Clap Clap Applaud Applaud

    Hurray!

    --
    The world will not get better through technology. We must seek to be better people.
    1. Re:Clap Clap Applaud Applaud by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Nobody got it that your comment was socially inappropriate in this context...

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  24. Autism Acceptance Movement? by VE3OGG · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have always wondered how such a cure for (types of) autism would be handled when you factor in the push by some to recognize Autism as merely another frame of mind (so to speak). Similar to the mutants in X-Men III when faced with the cure, parents would be faced with allowing their child to grow up austistic (with all the advantages it conveys, and all of the disadvantages) or to give the child a "normal" life, however that may be defined and again, with all the benefits and drawbacks thereof.

    Autism Acceptance

    1. Re:Autism Acceptance Movement? by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 2, Informative

      Maybe we should have a 'Diabetes Acceptance' movement where we let people with diabetes go into shock as nature intended them too.

      It's a shame there is still a stigma attached to helping people with mental problems....
      BTW I have a son diagnosed with autism and it is heart breaking seeing him struggle with things that are so easy for others.

      --
      Please sign petition to restore sanity to our banking system!!!

      http://financialpetition.org/
    2. Re:Autism Acceptance Movement? by SwordsmanLuke · · Score: 2, Informative

      with all the advantages it conveys, and all of the disadvantages

      I'm just curious, but to what are you referring to as "advantages?" Autism runs in my family and I'm hard pressed to see how it has given them any advantages in life. I have 7 cousins and one uncle with varying degrees of autism. My uncle is an autistic savant[1] with an incredible command of military history and equipment, but the mental maturity of a 6 year old. He has an incredible capability, but his disability leaves him unable to put it to any practical use. As for my cousins, their level of disability runs the gamut, from one who can speak only in single-word bursts to a slightly awkward sufferer of Aspberger's[2] syndrome.

      I understand the common conception that people suffering from Autism are just "differently abled." But really, most of them are not. Some, like my cousin with Aspberger's, can function in society, but will always feel alienated. This is not because people just aren't willing to accept them (as with the X-Men) but because they literally are unable to react "normally" to human emotion. This is usually the best quality of life you can people suffering from Autism can hope for. The majority of the sufferers are unable to live independent of live-in care and will never be able to contribute to society.

      If I were in the position of choosing whether or not to cure my child of *any* degree of autism, it'd be a no-brainer for me. Bring on the drugs!

      1) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autistic_savant
      2) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspberger's_Syndrome

      --
      Any plan which depends on a fundamental change in human behavior is doomed from the start.
    3. Re:Autism Acceptance Movement? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Autism has advantages. What advantages does diabetes have?

      Try making a realistic analogy next time.

    4. Re:Autism Acceptance Movement? by chefmonkey · · Score: 1

      You raise a good point. The topic has been pretty well explored in sci-fi as well. Consider the ultimate regret of the character of Wang Mu from Card's Children of the Mind -- or, more appropriately, the tragedy of Matthew from Asimov's short story "Light Verse". Will the solution be worth what one gives up for it? If such a "cure" is available, who will be allowed to make that decision? It will be far too easy to argue that an autistic individual isn't in a position to decide such things for himself.

      More directly: Einstein had a wide variety of social problems that were likely linked inextricably with his unusual mental acuity. If we had the technology to "cure" him, what would the world look like now?

    5. Re:Autism Acceptance Movement? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it's safe to assume that anyone with a nick "Penis Cleaver" is trolling. Nay, not even trolling. Trolling is supposed to subtle, it's just argumentative crapflooding on his part.

    6. Re:Autism Acceptance Movement? by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      What advantages does autism have?

    7. Re:Autism Acceptance Movement? by joseph449008 · · Score: 1

      That's a rather simplistic understanding of autism acceptance, and disability rights as a whole for that matter. Diabetes needs to be constructed as a medical condition, because to do otherwise would mean that persons afflicted with the condition could die. Diabetes is treatable medically, and treatment can prolong life. The same does not apply to autism or to most so-called "mental diseases". It's not clear that the medical model is the best model for autism. Certainly, the medical model has been a failure in the autism field so far (despite news like this that keep popping up every other week it seems). That's why some people push for a social model of disability instead. That probably includes most adults who identify themselves as autistic and even some children. Plus some parents. I'm also a parent, BTW.

    8. Re:Autism Acceptance Movement? by joseph449008 · · Score: 1
      A good paper I've read on the subject is "Autism: Common, heritable, but not harmful." by Gernsbacher et al. It doesn't look like the PDF is available publicly, but here's a quote from the article:

      "Quite compellingly, each of these statistically significant demonstrations of autistic superiority is labeled by its authors as a harmful dysfunction. Autistics' superior block-design performance is labeled "weak central coherence," symptomatic of dysfunctional "information processing in autism" (Shah & Frith 1993, p. 1351). Autistics' superior performance on embedded figures tests is considered "consistent with the cognitive-deficit theory proposed by Hermelin and O'Connor (1970) ... due to a central deficiency in information processing" (Shah & Frith 1983, p. 618). Autistics' superior recognition memory performance is attributed to deleteriously "enhanced attention to shallow aspects of perceived materials" (Toichi et al. 2002, p. 1424); their superior sentence comprehension is described as being "less proficient at semantically and syntactically integrating the words of a sentence" (Just et al. 2004, p. 1816); their superior imperviousness to memory distortions is explained by "representations in the semantic network [that] may be associated in an aberrant manner" (Beversdorf et al. 2000, p. 8736); and their superior resistance to misleading prior context is attributed to their perception being "less conceptual" (Ropar & Mitchell 2002, p. 652)."

      BTW, "superiority" is a term that is used in cognitive science. Don't read too much into it. Autisitcs are not generally into describing themselves as superior.

    9. Re:Autism Acceptance Movement? by joseph449008 · · Score: 1

      The way people feel about autistics (be them their relatives or not) is culturally constructed. I'm convinced of this. I have a classically autistic son, BTW. To give an example, I was reading the other day one of those dismal descriptions of autism that abound, and it described how siblings of autistic children are devastated and so forth. Yet, my son has a typical sister. Do you think she's devastated? Not in the least. She's very loving with him, and treats him like any sister would treat any little brother, even better. She never complains about him or says he shouldn't be the way he is or any of that. They have a great relationship, even though he doesn't talk. Why is that? I'm pretty sure it's simply because she's been raised not to have these prejudices - as simple as that. She's been raised not to have any racial prejudices for that matter, and she in fact is comfortable getting along with any type of person.

    10. Re:Autism Acceptance Movement? by triffid_98 · · Score: 1
      Well, there was a documentary on this a while back. You should really check it out. For the record, Einstein is by no means the only 'odd duck' who's drastically changed our lives. Imagine a world with a cured Nicola Tesla.

      More directly: Einstein had a wide variety of social problems that were likely linked inextricably with his unusual mental acuity. If we had the technology to "cure" him, what would the world look like now?

    11. Re:Autism Acceptance Movement? by joseph449008 · · Score: 1
      Oh, I forgot to mention - my stepdaughter has an autistic boyfriend.

      And to those interested in discussions around the idea of autism acceptance and/or neurodiversity, check out the collection of blogs at http://autism-hub.co.uk./ You will find most of the blogs there are science-oriented though.

    12. Re:Autism Acceptance Movement? by jamesh · · Score: 1

      This is one of the big problems with the application of the idea of the 'Autism Spectrum'. Someone will say to you "I know a guy who has autism, and he seems perfectly normal and is quite successful. Why would you want to cure autism?". What they are probably referring to is aspergers (also known as high functioning autism), and some people on the low end of that do just fine for the most part. But as you have found, a lot of people towards the higher end of the spectrum are desperately unhappy. I guess the whole thing comes down to the level of disability and the happiness of the individual.

      I think the world is slowly coming around to the idea of 'better living through chemistry', and the possibility that a brain malfunction is not a lot different (from a biological point of view) to a liver, heart, pancreas, or kidney malfunction. If it is making you miserable you try and fix it. If that involves taking drugs to do so, then so be it.

      Of course it all gets a bit more complicated when the condition isn't making you miserable, but is making those around you miserable, in which case the definition of 'malfunction' needs to be carefully considered.

  25. Mental stability by steveo777 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I've known a few autistic people growing up. Either through school, church, or friends. And I have to wonder. With all the support, drugs and training that goes into helping these people live 'normal' lives... what would happen if this gene therapy could cure adults? I'm well aware that this treatment is far from being used on any human, and I'm all for curing disease, so don't get me wrong. But will some one just wake up and feel 'free'? Or will it take time for them to get used to thinking 'normally'?

    Maybe the answer is just as simple as 'cured'. But something tells me that it will never be that simple.

    --
    This sig isn't original enough, it's time to come up with something witty...
    1. Re:Mental stability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most likely it will be like people learning to walk again after a crippling injury. Years of therapy, and eventually they'll work it out.

    2. Re:Mental stability by HtR · · Score: 1, Informative

      My son is severely autistic. He's missed out on much (or even most) of the learning that a preschooler does between the ages of 2 and 6, largely because of his missing social and imitation skills. Most experts believe people do most of their learning about the world during those formative years. Even if he could be cured, he could never get that back.
      Also, I've read and studied a lot over the years, and I've never heard the above theory that "some experts believe" in which the brain cannot get rid of connections between neurons. This sounds like something that would be easily proved or disproved, at least in animals, and I would guess it's overly simplistic.

      --
      Have you tried turning it off and on again?
    3. Re:Mental stability by Nebu · · Score: 1

      I've known a few autistic people growing up. Either through school, church, or friends. And I have to wonder. With all the support, drugs and training that goes into helping these people live 'normal' lives... what would happen if this gene therapy could cure adults? I'm well aware that this treatment is far from being used on any human, and I'm all for curing disease, so don't get me wrong. But will some one just wake up and feel 'free'? Or will it take time for them to get used to thinking 'normally'?

      Maybe the answer is just as simple as 'cured'. But something tells me that it will never be that simple.

      Note that some autists feel that autism is a part of their identity, and would not consider it a "disease" to be cured. Others feel that autism has caused suffering in their lives and would be happy to rid themselves of the condition.

      Are the autistic people you know high-functioning enough to hold a conversation with? If so, have you considered speaking with them to learn how they each individually feel about the concept of a "cure"?

    4. Re:Mental stability by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I'm reminded of a conversation with someone who INSISTED on always driving a stick shift, because that was What She Did. It was part of her identity, if you will.

      It came about that she couldn't find a suitable car with a stick, so she finally got one with an automatic transmission. First comment about the new car:

      "I can't believe I did all that extra work for all those years! this is SO much nicer!"

      I suspect a great many disabled people would react similarly, should they "lose" their disability, even if their initial reaction was "How dare you try to change me!"

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    5. Re:Mental stability by c_sd_m · · Score: 1

      From watching my autism younger brother over the last half dozen years or so (when he's had access to treatments, drugs, etc. that help), they would likely gradually adapt. The therapies, drugs, etc. now help them to slowly build the abilities that they lack. I expect they won't just "wake up normal" one morning since they would be missing the cognitive development based on the experiences that they couldn't previously understand/assimilate/[insert your definition of autism here]. A "cure" would be enabling them to gain the capacity to learn and develop in ways that were previously unavailable to them.

      Ask any parent whose child did the apparent regression around age 4 to autism [1]. It'd be the same thing in reverse, maybe more slowly.

      Maybe you wouldn't want to cure all Asperger's but if you've known someone with severe autism there's no question that anything that can be done should be done.

      [1] Typical only of some types of autism.

    6. Re:Mental stability by rgaginol · · Score: 1

      I dunno - I'm sure it wouldn't be an overnight thing.

      The worse case (which I'm willing to bet is very unlikely) is that the brain wouldn't be able to cope with thinking normally and it would be another trauma the autistic people had to endure.

      My guess is that the person with autism would recover gradually (maybe years even). At first they'd lose most symptoms of autism and be able to cope better - eventually they'd become normal and ignored as that "strange person". Eventually we'd see them playing MMO's like every other normal person:)

    7. Re:Mental stability by joseph449008 · · Score: 1

      You're assuming most autistic adults want to be cured, which is not true.

    8. Re:Mental stability by jamesh · · Score: 1

      I imagine that autistic people will start to be able to automate the social functioning (picking up social cues, reading body language, etc) and other stuff that they have to do manually. So it would be a slow road to travel. I think that mice probably don't have anywhere near the social environment that humans do though...

      Also think about what will happen when the drug companies realise that this would mean a reduced market for their existing cash cows...

    9. Re:Mental stability by Two99Point80 · · Score: 1
      I prefer another automotive analogy: earning the money for one's own car rather than having it paid for by others.

      Working hard for something seems likely to lead to that "something" being more appreciated and taken better care of. OTOH when communication and social interaction are very easy, they could just as easily be taken for granted, toyed with, deliberately broken for the hell of it, and just generally trivialized.

      Seems awfully easy to lose track of what is really meaningful in life if the basics aren't even worth thinking about. As an autistic person, I'm grateful for having to pay attention to interactions - I'm much more apt to value them that way; to take care with them.

      I guess some folks actually enjoy living the social equivalent of an Obfuscated Code Contest. But if seeking to understand and meaningfully interact with others isn't important, why are we here?

      - Dave - lots of presentations/research notes at my URL

    10. Re:Mental stability by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      As a high-functioning autistic myself, it would depend on the side-effects. I don't think such a cure could be effected without causing significant damage to my brain but if it didn't I might be willing to try. I'd still wait a few years until it's shown to not be like the stuff they gave Algernon though.

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    11. Re:Mental stability by steveo777 · · Score: 1

      Are the autistic people you know high-functioning enough to hold a conversation with? If so, have you considered speaking with them to learn how they each individually feel about the concept of a "cure"?

      Good question. Very good. I've known a range. Of note is a my friend's sister in law. She's a high-functioning (I think). She can hold a conversation and has been an assistant manager at a fast food joint for many years. But, I've never really thought to ask her what she would think of being cured, or if she would even like to use that word. On the other hand, I don't believe she'll ever be able to live on her own. Not sure if that defines 'high functioning'.

      I've also known some autistic kids growing up (my mother was an educator for kids with mental illness). And I'm not sure any of them would be considered high-functioning. At least, at the time. It's been about 8 years since I was in high school. Personally, I believe if there was some kind of fix, these guys might not be able to understand it (back then) or what it meant. But perhaps, now they would be able to get a grip on what it might mean to be 'cured'.

      --
      This sig isn't original enough, it's time to come up with something witty...
    12. Re:Mental stability by steveo777 · · Score: 1

      No. I am not. I am assuming a hypothetical situation in which "some one" wants to be cured. Re-read the post. Being that I currently know an autistic woman who is around 40, I know very well that there are people who wouldn't want to be, now notice how I put quotes around this word, 'cured'. That means that I'm using some one else's term. It indicates that I choose not to use the term, but have no better word to offer. Now, you have a very high UID so I'm assuming you're new around here. But get used to trying to interpret the tone of posts before putting words in peoples mouths... or at least their posts. Cheers.

      --
      This sig isn't original enough, it's time to come up with something witty...
    13. Re:Mental stability by Nebu · · Score: 1

      As a high-functioning autistic myself, it would depend on the side-effects. I don't think such a cure could be effected without causing significant damage

      I'm reminded of a quote from Eternal Sunshine: "Technically, the procedure is brain damage."

    14. Re:Mental stability by Reziac · · Score: 1

      As to that... to each his own, but I don't think it's fair to not give people the *choice* to correct or prevent such issues in themselves or their kids.

      Counter-example: I know a number of blind or near-blind people, and not a one of 'em would choose to keep their highly-developed dependency on their hearing, if they could have normal sight instead. As it is, they're forced to pay very close attention to sounds so they can decipher their surroundings, but another whole facet of existence is closed to them whether they wish it to be or not.

      Anyway, I'm glad you found your own path and that it works for you.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  26. Autism by Mockylock · · Score: 1

    How can they determine a mouse has autism?

    --
    "Please, shut up. Just when I think you can't say anything more stupid, you speak again." -Archie Bunker.
    1. Re:Autism by dvice_null · · Score: 1

      They give it a computer and monitor does it go to slahdot.org or to myspace.com.

  27. Its not about Bush .. its about porn. by trolltalk.com · · Score: 1, Funny

    "Prior to treatment they showed signs of hyperactivity, purposeless and repetitive movements."

    Sounds more like someone surfing the net for pr0n, accompanied by the sound of one hand clapping ...

    1. Re:Its not about Bush .. its about porn. by cp.tar · · Score: 3, Funny

      Isn't that, one hand fapping?

      --
      Ignore this signature. By order.
  28. Re:Now that's just selfish by aliquis · · Score: 1

    I've tried, I've even registered here but no babes. Well I meet a girl but she wasn't sufficient ;D

  29. not again by snoozykat · · Score: 1

    Fragile X is in the Autism spectrum but to say it 'cures autism' is very misleading. I find these types of press releases very detrimental for parents with children with autism, it gives them false hope. Last night on nightline they focused upon two differing views on autism treatments and causes and I found some of it very disturbing and downright reckless "science".

    1. Re:not again by tthomas48 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why is this false hope? A cure for one type of a disease generally leads to better understanding, and the ability to focus on other parts of the disease.

      You could accuse them of giving false hope if they were recommending feeding autistic children 7 gallons of cod liver oil, or some other snake oil cure. But an advance in real science should inspire real hope that we can completely solve this puzzle some day.

    2. Re:not again by snoozykat · · Score: 1

      Autism is a spectrum diagnosis. What was once a limited classification diagnosis has now expanded to include other conditions which manifest in autistic-like behaviors. Fragile X is one of many many conditions that fall under the Autism spectrum. It gives hope to parents of Fragile X children yes, but there are so many other conditions classified under autism.

  30. Not so Definitely by TubeSteak · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is definitely a good thing. Definitely. Definitely. I may be bucking the general consensus, but a lot of people would not consider this a good thing.

    First, there are the religious types, who dissapprove because "that's how God made them."

    Then there are the parents (religious or not) who say "my child is special and I wouldn't want them any other way." You'd be surprised how often this sentiment gets expressed.

    Not everyone believes that (and I don't mean it in a negative sense) is a laudible goal for science.
    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
    1. Re:Not so Definitely by Rakishi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I may be bucking the general consensus, but a lot of people would not consider this a good thing. If its severe autism make them take care of the autistic kid for a few years and I'm sure almost all will be begging for the drug.

      First, there are the religious types, who dissapprove because "that's how God made them." Most don't seem to mind current medicine so thats a moot point.

      Then there are the parents (religious or not) who say "my child is special and I wouldn't want them any other way." You'd be surprised how often this sentiment gets expressed. When you need to deal with an autistic kid for their whole life then I'd be surprised if you didn't rationalize it somehow to keep your own sanity.
    2. Re:Not so Definitely by KingSkippus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      First, there are the religious types, who dissapprove because "that's how God made them." Then there are the parents (religious or not) who say "my child is special and I wouldn't want them any other way." You'd be surprised how often this sentiment gets expressed.

      I wouldn't say that "a lot of people" feel this way.

      Also, I won't beat around the bush: These people are stupid idiots that ought to be arrested for severe child abuse. Anyone who thinks this for any reason is a bad and extraordinarily selfish parent and should immediately have their children taken away from them. Anyone who would deliberately impose a curable handicap on their children should be beaten, and I'd be happy to volunteer to be the one who brings the baseball bat and takes the first few swings. I sure as hell don't think I'd be the last one, either.

    3. Re:Not so Definitely by ChocolateNinj4 · · Score: 1

      Then there are also people with autism who would not want to change themselves. I know that there are many (excuse my vagueness, but I don't know what percentage) people with autism who like the way they think, and wouldn't want to change that in order to be a "normal" person. Of course, that wouldn't really apply to infants, whose autism could be reversed and then develop without it.

    4. Re:Not so Definitely by dugjohnson · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have to think that the people who say that are mostly saying it because, to date, there hasn't been a way for their child to be any different than they are. It certainly can't help the development of the autistic child for the parent to be running around lamenting the fate that has produced such a child. These statements indicate acceptance of the child as they are, not, as it appears on the surface, that they wouldn't really accept a cure if it were available. I think you would be VERY hard pressed to find a parent who wouldn't go for a cure if it were available. Not saying there are none, just an incredibly small number. And in those cases, a baseball bat might be in order.
      I just think you need to cut the parents who make those statements some slack. They are dealing with a very difficult situation.

      --
      My brain is overly lubricated
    5. Re:Not so Definitely by Nebu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Then there are the parents (religious or not) who say "my child is special and I wouldn't want them any other way."
      These people are stupid idiots that ought to be arrested for severe child abuse. Anyone who thinks this for any reason is a bad and extraordinarily selfish parent and should immediately have their children taken away from them. Anyone who would deliberately impose a curable handicap on their children should be beaten, and I'd be happy to volunteer to be the one who brings the baseball bat and takes the first few swings. I sure as hell don't think I'd be the last one, either.

      I'm also confident you won't be the last one. But I'm worried you (and your peers) may be overly judging things too rashly.

      I am autistic, and I don't consider my condition to be a handicap. Autism makes some parts of my life more difficult, but it makes other parts of my life easier. I imagine it's like being taller than average: some things are easier (reaching the top shelf) and some things are harder (fitting into a small car). It's hard to say whether, from a utilitarian perspective, one way is overall "better" than the other. It'd be an ideal world if it happened to balanced out perfectly so that someone with my degree of autism had exactly the same potential for joy and suffering as a neurotypical person, however I suspect the probability of that is low. I don't want you to discount the idea that perhaps my life is easier than a neurotypical person, and that my degree of autism may actually be an advantage. It's certainly a possibility.

      Furthermore, the parents may be working under the (I think) reasonable assumption that there are risks to every medical treatment. There's a strong belief that autism is hereditary, and so if I have a child, I'm open to the possibility that may be born autistic. Given that my life turned out pretty good, I'd probably favour not having medical procedures done on a child, all other things being equal.

      To clarify, I'm fully willing to take into account my doctor's advice and opinions. If the doctor told me "Your child is extremely autistic, and will probably require 24/7 supervision and will never learn to speak. I strongly recommend we go through with the treatment, as the risks are very minor.", then I'd probably sign whatever forms were necessary and let the autism get "cured". On the other hand, if the doctor says "Your child has some signs of high functioning autism. If untreated, he'll probably end up within the same spectrum range as you. We can apply a treatment, but there are some very minor risks. It's your call, do you want to proceed?" I'd probably respond with "No. I enjoyed my life. I think he will too."

    6. Re:Not so Definitely by kklein · · Score: 0, Troll

      God bless you.

      Unfortunately, I think you're wrong about it not being a lot of people. Ask around. People are stupid.

      Perhaps that's why they want to have retarded kids around. Makes them feel intelligent.

    7. Re:Not so Definitely by xero314 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      These people are stupid idiots that ought to be arrested for severe child abuse. I didn't know that allowing your children to think differently than societal standards was child abuse.

      Anyone who would deliberately impose a curable handicap on their children should be beaten. You mean we should go out an beat people who allow there kids to be homosexual, I mean I have heard that is a curable handicap. Or are you just waiting for gene therapy to allow people of african decent to rid themselves of the skin discoloration handicap they have.

      And don't even think of telling me I'm way off base. Being close minded, like you obviously are, is a curable handicap as well and I know a number of people that would be happy to beat your parents for allowing you to continue being this way.

      Really it's people like you that reinforce my belief that evolution is dead since we keep "curing" every mutation that comes along.
    8. Re:Not so Definitely by Jarjarthejedi · · Score: 1

      Odd...I've never heard either of those arguments, and I know a couple who are religious and have an Autistic child. I doubt they'd want to have their kid in the first round of tests, but I highly doubt they'd reject it because 'that's how God made them' (an odd sentiment as Autism, to all intents and purposes and without meaning to be insulting, appears to be a disease or at least genetic problem, something introduced by the Fall, and so fixing it isn't a bad thing, 'least that's my impression of it).

      Now that second sentiment sounds a lot more possible, I wouldn't doubt that that would be an issue raised. However the parents who think that will simply not give their kids the drugs, other kids will still benefit from them and someday those kids can decide to try the drugs themselves perhaps.

      I'd say this is a good thing for just about everyone, and for the few people who think it isn't it's not a bad thing, just a neutral thing.

      --
      There are two kinds of fool One says 'This is old therefore good' Another says 'This is new therefore better'- Dean Ing
    9. Re:Not so Definitely by Derosian · · Score: 1

      I would have to disagree with you. First of all you attack the parents who would make the decision, and ignore their arguments. You claim autism as a handicap while ignoring what autistic children are often capable of. The 'handicap' is subjective. According to autistic children you could be handicapped because of your inability to capture a scene perfectly with a pencil. And we all know Communication majors believe you're handicapped because of your inability to argue a point, don't let that plus 5 insightful go to your head. The point of the matter is it should be the parents choice, whether their children are 'fixed' or not. I am glad my mother never put me on medicine for my mental problem, I am more unique than most other people and I was able to overcome my shortcomings on my own.

      Perhaps if I had been 'fixed' as a child I would be just like everyone else, and ready to use violence to try and prove any point I feel strongly about.

    10. Re:Not so Definitely by ndansmith · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Also, I won't beat around the bush: These people are stupid idiots that ought to be arrested for severe child abuse. Anyone who thinks this for any reason is a bad and extraordinarily selfish parent and should immediately have their children taken away from them. Anyone who would deliberately impose a curable handicap on their children should be beaten, and I'd be happy to volunteer to be the one who brings the baseball bat and takes the first few swings. I sure as hell don't think I'd be the last one, either.

      What if we do not agree on what makes a handicap? I know that some people in the deaf community choose not to get cochlear implants (as close to a "cure" as we have) because they do not perceive deafness as something needing a cure.
    11. Re:Not so Definitely by Egdiroh · · Score: 1

      I agree with you in principal the children with special needs should not be allowed to suffer because of it when preventable. However given that in our society in most regards parents have precedence over society with regard to most child rearing decisions, and given that the rules of our society are set up to allow for many different systems of belief to coexist, the change you have proposed to our societal rules is impossible. If you want to make that change you must first either limit the scope of acceptable diverse beliefs, or increase the amount of control the society is allowed to exert with regard to how children are raised.

      Additionally I would like to voice my agreement for the autistic individual's sentiment that different is not necessarily worse.

    12. Re:Not so Definitely by Coppit · · Score: 1

      Actually these are *exactly* the sentiments of the deaf community. Most don't see anything wrong with being deaf, and many consider it borderline child abuse to give your kid a cochlear implant.

    13. Re:Not so Definitely by Egdiroh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is definitely a good thing. Definitely. Definitely.

      I may be bucking the general consensus, but a lot of people would not consider this a good thing.

      First, there are the religious types, who dissapprove because "that's how God made them."

      Then there are the parents (religious or not) who say "my child is special and I wouldn't want them any other way." You'd be surprised how often this sentiment gets expressed.

      Not everyone believes that (and I don't mean it in a negative sense) is a laudible goal for science. This might make me seem like a nut job, but while I don't go in for the whole eugenics thing that the parent linked to, I do think that people should consider the consequences to humanity if people who due to genetic conditions would not be able to pass on their genetic condition are. Aside from the fact that that means the number of members of the next generation that need to be treated for this condition will be higher, it also means that as time goes by a higher percentage of the population will have the condition and that is a higher percentage of society that will rely on sophisticated medical intervention to be a fully productive (In this case fully productive includes replacing yourself) member of society. Which would be problematic if humanity or any isolated portion of it (say, a colony on another in another solar system that has to survive for generations before any remotely originating assistance can be rendered) is deprived of our current level of technology for a generation or two. Of course the solution to this should be restrictions on procreation of treated people rather then a restriction on treatment, in a world where procreation is an inalienable right. But if we're sure that no asteroid will hit, and no nuclear wars will happen, and we'll only leave the solar system after we've figured out how to get to where we are going in less then a decade then consequences be damned.
    14. Re:Not so Definitely by Galactic+Dominator · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There is possibly another scenario here in that if the effects are reversible late enough, there may enough people in your situation who elect to get the "cure" who will be able to provide valuable feedback. It could be something very traumatic for a person, and very difficult to adjust to. On the other hand it could be something like being color-blind your entire life only to wake some morning to find the whole spectrum of colors and a new wave of positive experiences. Before I say my view...I think you have a point and a very interesting perspective. But, before you tend in one direction or another you might consider your definition of good. See, you say good, but it's all relative. I had a friend who was sort of the troublesome sort and a good day for him is a day in which he didn't talk to the police or require stitches. My point is I can't know what it's like for you, and you can't know what it's like for me so the best scenario would be to find out from someone who's had both experiences. Or another possibility is since I didn't RTFA I don't WTF I'm talking about.

      --
      brandelf -t FreeBSD /brain
    15. Re:Not so Definitely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then there are also people with autism who would not want to change themselves. I know that there are many (excuse my vagueness, but I don't know what percentage) people with autism who like the way they think, and wouldn't want to change that in order to be a "normal" person. Me, for example. (though I belong on the higher-functioning end of the spectrum. there is, at the least, a fair share of people all over it who agree, though, as I have seen in many discussions) There are few - save those who actually suffer with and despise themselves - who would like to be fundamentally changed into what amounts to a different person than who they are, as would be the result of a "treatment" that so widely affected the workings of the brain.

      I strive to improve myself in whatever ways I can (not to compensate for "disability", mind you, but in the interests of becoming as rational and intelligent a being as I can muster. something that can hardly be said of people in general. in fact, I'd say "normality" is mutually exclusive with that goal), but no matter what, I am not prepared to give up my basic "person", being changed into something which is not "me".

      Such would - quite literally, if I can have my way in the matter - be done over my dead body. And here - knowing the ways and views of this society - I must confess to viewing the future with a little tint of paranoia at times.
    16. Re:Not so Definitely by TheGreatHegemon · · Score: 1

      Indeed. I think people forget that sometimes flaws may play some role in producing very impressive people. Think of Stephen Hawking - would he have dedicated all his brainpower to Science if he was still fully mobile? I doubt it. All those advances he made would have been for naught. Granted, he may not be the best example (I imagine he hates being stuck in a chair).

    17. Re:Not so Definitely by glitch23 · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Anyone who thinks this for any reason is a bad and extraordinarily selfish parent and should immediately have their children taken away from them. Anyone who would deliberately impose a curable handicap on their children should be beaten, and I'd be happy to volunteer to be the one who brings the baseball bat and takes the first few swings. I sure as hell don't think I'd be the last one, either.

      Great, now we can add another person to the list of people who think they are allowed to injure/maim/kill someone else because they feel they are justified and not because of self-defense. Why is beating someone with a baseball bat okay if the person doesn't represent a clear and present danger to you? I hate to break it to you but you would be the one going to jail, not to mention you give them the right to hit you back w/o fear of them going to jail for the assault (there's your self defense you don't care about).

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    18. Re:Not so Definitely by Simon+Garlick · · Score: 1

      I can't wait for the protests and lawsuits claiming that autism isn't a condition, it's a "lifestyle choice".

    19. Re:Not so Definitely by Woofles · · Score: 1

      "I think you would be VERY hard pressed to find a parent who wouldn't go for a cure if it were available." I call bullshit. Try http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2005-07-23-tra nfusion-jw_x.htm . While not a cure, it is a life-saving treatment that was refused by a Jehovah's parent for a 12 year old boy! This happens a bit, which is why custody can be rapidly taken from parents when needed.

      --
      Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes something special to be different
    20. Re:Not so Definitely by CptPicard · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's an interesting issue I have come across as I've been involved in the (European) disability rights movement. Some people within it are VERY much against treating disability as a "medical flaw" in the person that is in need of a cure; they have internalized disability so deeply, that it almost offends their identity to suggest disability is something a cure should be sought for. Instead, according to the so-called "social model" of disability, the hindrances are not caused by the disability, but because there is a mismatch between the person's abilities and the surrounding society.

      I've had long discussions about this with a certain otherwise bright girl with CP who is nevertheless an unyielding hippie and who claims that seriously, she wouldn't want to be cured even if a cure were available, as it would alter who she is. And this is a person who is in a wheelchair. Considering that I am a wheelchair-using cripple too, that kind of a position is hard to comprehend. Make my bones not break easily and give me some 50cm more height and my life would be much easier, and I don't think I would lose anything I particularly love about my life!

      Of course, the whole medical/social model of disability discussion which unfortunately seems to preoccupy so much of the minds involved in the disability movement is just semantic bullshit that seeks to shift the "blame" for the issue away from the person, and make us feel less like medical objects that need to be conformant to some ideal we don't fit. IMO, while there is limited sense in arguing that people have the right to be who they are, mostly this seems to just expose insecurities in disabled thought... there is a need to be so defensive of our disability, that we end up actually hurting our own cause by saying that the problem doesn't really even exist, and that attempts to make things better on a personal, "individual-altering" basis are "wrong"! Worse yet, producing sociology papers on this topic is such huge intellectual masturbation that I am absolutely certain the time and effort could be better used trying to find actual, pragmatic solutions to issues...

      I guess some people are just so traumatized by the almost imagined "blame" and medical "objectification" that they just aren't able to see that it would be OK to accept a cure... at least to me to be able to say that is liberating. My disability is not "my identity"; it's very much a mere medical issue, nothing else. And as such, it is hopefully treatable in the future, if not in my case, but in some future person's case. (But let's not go here to the fact that for my diagnosis the "cure" tends to be abortion these days, and I'm around because fetal diagnostics weren't there in 1979...)

      --
      I want to play Free Market with a drowning Libertarian.
    21. Re:Not so Definitely by WilliamSChips · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The question I want to know is: for HFA/Asperger's people, will this destroy their mental advantage? That's pretty much all I want to know.

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    22. Re:Not so Definitely by crazyjimmy · · Score: 1

      Knowing a child with fragile-x my gut reaction was to say, "but... but... but..."
      And I'm not the parent, just a friend.
      There is some fear in the concept that they could suddenly change... what if they stopped being that awesome cute person that they are?
      Which is not to say I'd deny anyone the treatment, ever. It's more saying that I do love them, and I love them exactly as they are.

      --Jimmy

    23. Re:Not so Definitely by Captain+Sarcastic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree completely.

      My brother has two sons, one very mildly autistic, one not so mildly. I have not sent him a link for this article for two reasons: (1) he and his wife probably have all kinds of well-meaning friends who have e-mailed this link, and (2) hope is painful, and the limited amount of hope that this offers is comes nowhere near the pain that would ensue.

      The studies right now are only showing results for a particular kind of autism. This does not cover all of the different types that exist. This is like someone coming up with a "silver bullet" for bone cancer, that might not help people with lung cancer. It's a promising sign, and I hope to $DEITY that it works in humans, but it doesn't yet cover the rest of the types of autism that afflict us.

      Meanwhile, since the treatments are not yet ready, the boys still need to get the therapies that they are already getting. My older nephew doesn't really show much sign of autism, and my younger one is starting to make breakthroughs on communicating with people. But until this shows more than promise, all that my brother and sister-in-law can do is keep on keeping on, and may the gods look on them kindly.

      --
      Strike while the irony is hot! -- The Freethinker
    24. Re:Not so Definitely by phreakincool · · Score: 1, Informative

      Very well said! I mean, what's a parent (like me) supposed to say? "Gee, its too bad my child is a complete 'tard. Oh well." (shrugs) Of course were going to be outwardly positive about our child's to friends and family and the public. And internally, we are constantly crying because we know our child's outlook is severely limited. Do you have any idea what takes to raise an autistic child? My wife can't work because she has to be there for my son. He needs constant supervision. In my son's case we have to have special locks on the doors so he doesn't leave the house and wander into the streets. He has no real concept of danger. He's 10 years old.

    25. Re:Not so Definitely by phreakincool · · Score: 0

      Sorry, I went on a rant there. After the first sentence, the rest of the post was directed towards the grandparent post.

    26. Re:Not so Definitely by butlerdi · · Score: 1

      Deaf people are an excellent example. It is in many cases helped by operations and devices. However many deaf people feel that it would be wrong to provide this to their children. They somehow feel that it is an affront to their lifestyle. I worked in a building which housed a deaf club and this was a major topic discussed between many of the members.

      --
      "If the King's English was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for me!" -- "Ma" Ferguson, Governor of Texas (circa
    27. Re:Not so Definitely by KoldKompress · · Score: 1

      Actually, he was a gifted student before he got Lou Gehrig's disease.

      Also, after finding out he had the disease, he didn't see much point in getting a PhD and was going to drop out of Cambridge University, until he married his first wife. So if it wasn't for his social relationships, he probably wouldn't have found the will to continue on with his amazing career.

    28. Re:Not so Definitely by Maelwryth · · Score: 1

      Could be worse, you could be msituA like those poor mice are now.

      --
      I reserve the write to mangle english.
    29. Re:Not so Definitely by Kokuyo · · Score: 1

      And that gets modded Insightful? What's wrong with you people?

      Just because from our point of view Autism is this big, bad thing where you can't be anything but happy doesn't make it right to just change the affected people. How are we supposed to know whether they are happy the way they are?

      I mean, seriously, autists have shown some incredible skills in certain areas. So just because Spiderman's life sucks in your eyes you're going to take his Spider-powers away? So who died and made you king to decide that?

      I think the parents, excluding religious types, who don't want to change their kids have it absolutely right...

    30. Re:Not so Definitely by BigBuckHunter · · Score: 1

      I didn't know that allowing your children to think differently than societal standards was child abuse.

      I have no idea how this got modded as insightful. You take the stance that failing to treat a easily identifiable medical condition isn't child abuse, using the same argument that NAMBLA uses to justify sex with young boys. It's not abuse, it's a different "societal standard". Autism and CP are medical conditions, we're willing to help you. You've already given up or are just afraid you'll actually have to do something with your life once your out of that chair.

      What a croc
      BBH

    31. Re:Not so Definitely by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      I know that some people in the deaf community choose not to get cochlear implants

      I don't have a disability, but if it was possible for me to get an implant which would radically improve the functioning of my body (not just hearing), then I would consider it.

      Some kind of generic computer-brain interface would definitely be a goer for me. Perhaps more cochlear implants would be used if they were not marketed so directly as a treatment for a problem.

    32. Re:Not so Definitely by dcam · · Score: 1

      I have a relative who is hearing impaired (although not deaf). In that community there are people whose hearing is better than hers who do not want to be "cured" (eg hearing aids cochlear implants etc). We do need to be careful. Some people see their disability was a blessing.

      --
      meh
    33. Re:Not so Definitely by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      Perhaps more cochlear implants would be used if they were not marketed so directly as a treatment for a problem.

      But ... they are.

      You sure as hell don't want or need any of these if your hearing is intact. While they can allow people with certain hearing disorder to have a "normal" conversation with others (as long as there isn't too much background noise, etc, etc), they're even less than pale when compared to the real thing.

    34. Re:Not so Definitely by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      Well, I have a young daughter, and thankfully there's nothing wrong with her that some dental work won't fix. (Yeah, a Brit with bad teeth, say it ain't so)

      However, if there was something wrong with her that couldn't be cured, do you really think I'd be wailing and wringing my hands and cursing cruel fate, pleading with anyone who'll listen to find me a cure for her? Or do you think I'd be telling her that I love her just the way she is, and that while $things might be harder for her, that's just the way she is and everyone is different and it's nothing to be ashamed of or upset about?

      If a cure became available, yes I'd see that she got it if possible. But in the absence of a cure, I'd try not to give her a complex about whatever was wrong with her.

      I'd be utterly amazed if more than about 2% of the people who say that sort of thing would actually withhold a cure from their child. For those ones, I'll happily take my turn on the bat.

    35. Re:Not so Definitely by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      They are a human being, not a pet. Any action you (or others) take on their behalf should be made in their interests, not others'.

      The test is: Would you exchange places with them if you could?

      Rich

    36. Re:Not so Definitely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then those people are idiots.

      The real problem here is what should be determined a handicap. If you have mild autism and can super focus to your benefit then thats great. If you have severe autism and cannot function as an individual in society then your handicapped and if it can be cured it should be. If your in a wheelchair and your body can be fixed it should be. If your deaf and we can restore your ears it should be done, likewise with those who are blind.

      Hey its all fine and good to say that people have the right to choose what is done to their own bodies. I am all for it. However, if your malady is completely curable and you choose not to fix it, no company, government, or private institution should have to cater to your special needs. No taxes, government regulations, or money should be wasted because you want to suffer with your "special situation."

      If someone won't help themself then they should expect nothing from me.

    37. Re:Not so Definitely by xero314 · · Score: 1
      I'm not Autistic and don't know anyone directly who is Autistic. I have reasons to read and study Autism and the Autistic Support movements. My argument was merely that the original commentor was being extremely close minded, and not realizing that the classifications of mental disorders changes fairly regularly, and that sometimes what we classify as a mental disorder one year will be declassified the next. Homosexuality is one of those items that was classified as a mental disorder until it's removal in 1974, and Autism (at least some areas of the spectrum) may turn out to be the same way in the future.

      Now if you actually want to argue your point with people more qualified than myself then I suggest you check out the following: And that's just the few I know off the top of my head.

      You have your whole life ahead of you, stop wasting it by hiding your bigotry behind medical classifications.
    38. Re:Not so Definitely by Qwaniton · · Score: 1

      Yo, I'm autistic too but I'd definitely be fine with getting rid of the rough edges under the hood. Helps me spit game, son.

    39. Re:Not so Definitely by BigBuckHunter · · Score: 1

      Autism = protine defect
      Homosexuality = Preference, just like hetrosexuality

      As an example... I don't like men sexually. I also don't like the flavor or texture of eggplant. If you dress up eggplant, you could probably fool me into eating it without knowing the difference (eggplant parm). If I go to Thailand, I could probably get a BJ from a TV without knowing it. I'd never choose to do either (eggplant parm or a Thai man hooker dressed as a woman).
      Preference, choice, etc. It's not like I'm mechanically incapable, it's just that I'm don't like men sexually... Did I mention I hate eggplant. If you offered a me a million bucks, I'd happily do either (go gay for a year, or eat eggplant for a year). Heck, Dan Savage may even take up the same offer.

      Autism is no more a choice than Alzheimer's or down syndrome. You can't offer someone a million bucks not to have down syndrome for a year.

      BBH

    40. Re:Not so Definitely by xero314 · · Score: 1

      Autism = protine defect Awesome, you have been able to do what no other scientist or Dr. has been able to do since Eugen Bleuler coined the term Autism in 1910. Then again I don't know what "protine" is so maybe you are on to something. You have also been able to rule out all the physiological differences noted among homosexuals as compared to heterosexuals, so you aught to publish all your findings since it will put an end to these debates once and for all.

      Look, I'm not going to argue that people with Autism don't differ from those with out on some physical level, but I'm not going to stand by and basically have people like you undo hundreds or thousands of years of struggle for human equality. Autism, and I don't mean to offend, is no different that having dark skin. Yes it is a physical difference but not necessarily one that requires a cure. There are benefits to Autism just as there are to having dark skin pigmentation, and curing these "diseases" will eradicate those advantages. Or even better yet, since so many genetic disorders only effect Males why don't we cure them by doing away with the y chromosome. Lucky for use some day artificial fertilization will be to a point where we no longer need the Y chromosome, and it has already been reported to have been successful in laboratories.

      You can't offer someone a million bucks not to have down syndrome for a year. But I bet you could offer them a million bucks to not have male genitalia (or female as the case may be), and those are no more a choice than down syndrome or autism.

      So what we have learned is that your arguments are either false, or unsupported, and that your analogies do not hold up under any sort of examination. There are many people better suited to take up this argument than myself, and I hope that you take the time to do it and maybe you will learn that Autism is not necessarily what you think it is.
    41. Re:Not so Definitely by steve86-ed · · Score: 1

      ...and now he gets to go to space. I don't know how that fits into this discussion, but I want to go to space too.

    42. Re:Not so Definitely by BigBuckHunter · · Score: 1

      You have also been able to rule out all the physiological differences noted among homosexuals as compared to heterosexuals,

      I assure you that any physiological difference between homo and hetro is entirely imaginary.

      BBH

  31. Algernon by chuckymonkey · · Score: 3, Funny

    "P.S. please if you get a chanse put some flowrs on Algernons grave in the bak yard."

    --
    "Some books contain the machinery required to create and sustain universes."-Tycho
  32. The Speed of Dark by Sibko · · Score: 2, Insightful
    This is really fascinating. There's a rather good book I read, "The Speed of Dark" by Elizabeth Moon that talks about this very thing.

    "If I had not been what I am, what would I have been?" wonders Lou Arrendale, the autistic hero of Moon's compelling exploration of the concept of "normalcy" and what might happen when medical science attains the knowledge to "cure" adult autism. Arrendale narrates most of this book in a poignant earnestness that verges on the philosophical and showcases Moon's gift for characterization. The occasional third-person interjections from supporting characters are almost intrusive, although they supply needed data regarding subplots. At 35, Arrendale is a bioinformatics specialist who has a gift for pattern analysis and an ability to function well in both "normal" and "autistic" worlds. When the pharmaceutical company he works for recommends that all the autistic employees on staff undergo an experimental procedure that will basically alter their brains, his neatly ordered world shatters. All his life he has been taught "act normal, and you will be normal enough"-something that has enabled him to survive, but as he struggles to decide what to do, the violent behavior of a "normal friend" puts him in danger and rocks his faith in the normal world. He struggles to decide whether the treatment will help or destroy his sense of self. Is autism a disease or just another way of being? He is haunted by the "speed of dark" as he proceeds with his mesmerizing quest for self-"Not knowing arrives before knowing; the future arrives before the present. From this moment, past and future are the same in different directions, but I am going that way and not this way.... When I get there, the speed of light and the speed of dark will be the same." His decision will touch even the most jaded "normal."
  33. Karma by Joebert · · Score: 1

    There's no possibility of a 7'6" 320LB retarded kid having parts of his brain repaired that would make him realize he was being picked on or remember the names of those people with this research, right ?

    --
    Wanna fight ? Bend over, stick your head up your ass, and fight for air.
  34. A good thing??? by PinkyGigglebrain · · Score: 1

    Why are you so sure its a good thing?

    How many of histories most creative people might have been "cured" before they achived their greatness?

    I will agree that this would be great in extreme cases, but I worry about how it would be used "cure" people who just have enough autism to see the world differently and who ask the questions that "normal" people never think to ask, or don't want to. You know, the questions like "could I still see my reflection in a mirror if I traveled at the speed of light?", Einstien asked that one, and brought forth modern physics.

    Think about the all the things that where invented or discovered in the course of human history, I would bet that almost all of them where made by people who had autism or Aspergers to some degree.

    1. Re:A good thing??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Think about the all the things that where invented or discovered in the course of human history, I would bet that almost all of them where made by people who had autism or Aspergers to some degree.

      You'd probably lose that bet. The "mad genius" myth is just that, a myth. Watch James Burke's "Connections" if you think most important inventions and discoveries were not made by people just like you and me.

  35. Obligatory... by deblau · · Score: 2, Funny

    I for one welcome our socially outgoing, well-adjusted, fuzzy minuscule overlords.

    --
    This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
    1. Re:Obligatory... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I for one welcome our socially outgoing, well-adjusted, fuzzy minuscule overlords.


      And pretty soon they'll be anally ingoing underlords!
  36. Dupe? by ozbird · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "Flowers for Algernon", Daniel Keyes...

    1. Re:Dupe? by unknamed · · Score: 1

      That was my first thought when I saw this.

      Great story, it's one of those I read when I was young and has stuck with me.

  37. Feedback loop by paleo2002 · · Score: 2, Funny

    But, People magazine and Tom Cruise told me that vaccines cause autism! How can a vaccine cure autism?

    1. Re:Feedback loop by IHC+Navistar · · Score: 1

      To Cruise says that because he is a retarded shill for Scientology idiots.

      Maybe we can create a vaccine that cures people of Scientology?

      --
      Knowing Google's lust for data collection, the Soviet Union is still alive and well inside the psyche of Sergey Brin....
  38. Retard mice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine a beowulf cluster of these!

  39. Choices by norminator · · Score: 3, Informative

    Typically, (from what I've seen) those are people with Asperger's Syndrome. They can still function in society, even if they aren't very social, and the Asperger's gives them a level of focus and concentration on mundane things that the rest of us don't have, which can help in certain careers, like programming..

    Of course Autism is a spectral disorder, but people with full-blown autism probably aren't normally capable of even understanding the choice. That said, my little sister with Asperger's would definitely reverse it in a heartbeat if there were a way to do it right now. She has had a tough time finding a niche where she can apply herself for her career, and she has always struggled socially, which has made her feel miserable.

    As far as parents making the decision, though... From what I've seen and read, when autism starts to make itself known, the kids withdraw into themselves, as if their personality gets locked away inside their minds, and you're watching it go until it's all but gone. In addressing one of the posts above that speculated that many religious wacko parents wouldn't want to reverse that, I can assure you, any parent would want to unlock their child from whatever dark room they are trapped in. Just to be able to hug your kid and be hugged back, or to have a normal conversation, would be a tremendously wonderful thing after watcing your kid disappear into his own mind.

  40. Autism, Autism, or Autism? by occamboy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    One difficulty is that the psychology community keeps insisting that there is something called an "autism spectrum". Last time I did some research on this, I could not find a single piece of evidence to support a spectrum - in fact, the little evidence that existed indicated that there are several distinct conditions that have some symptoms in common.

    1. Re:Autism, Autism, or Autism? by jamesh · · Score: 1

      To grossly simplify it, the idea is that ADHD, Aspergers, and Autism are different degrees of the same thing, they all involve different degrees of disability in terms of things like social interaction, and the ability to focus concentration.

      The thing about 'syndromes' is that typically they are just a name for a bunch of symptoms which often occur together, and it's useful in some ways to treat it as a single condition even if the cause isn't well (or at all) understood. In this case, the 'Autism Spectrum' is a useful way of classifying cases in terms of the treatment and management that will best benefit the 'sufferer', but like all generalisations, you have to remember that it is a generalisation, or it can be misused.

      And remember, this is one of those things that for every researcher who holds one view you'll find another who holds an opposing view...

    2. Re:Autism, Autism, or Autism? by sd790 · · Score: 1
      You
      must
      not
      have
      looked
      hard.

      The autism spectrum includes a range of conditions from severe symptoms in which the afflicted is non-functional to high-functioning autism like Aspbergers. The reason it is considered a spectrum is that most of those diagnosed with autism have some combination of traits that are found somewhere on the spectrum. Common traits usually involve sensory processing issues and nonverbal communication deficits.

    3. Re:Autism, Autism, or Autism? by occamboy · · Score: 1

      You're confusing "proof by repetition" with "science".

      For example, pneumonia and lung cancer have various symptoms in common. So should we say that pneumonia is part of a "lung cancer spectrum"? Of course not - but this is precisely what psychologists are doing with a bunch of people who have certain characteristics in common.

    4. Re:Autism, Autism, or Autism? by occamboy · · Score: 1

      But this "spectrum autism" label is quite misleading, and there's no evidence that it's helpful.

      For example, kids who we used to call "nerds" are now labeled as having a "autistic spectrum disorder" (hence all of the interest from slashdot). One prominent psychologist that I spoke with said that many MIT professors have autism spectrum disorder - I'm not sure that "MIT professor" and "disorder" really belong together - these are obviously very-high-functioning people - I'm not sure that their inability to be used-car salesmen should be labeled a "disorder".

    5. Re:Autism, Autism, or Autism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha, you're thinking like a doctor. They often treat symptoms and not root causes because of that line of thought.

    6. Re:Autism, Autism, or Autism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      There's no doubt that not everyone DIAGNOSED as on the spectrum suffers from the same thing. However, when it comes to autistic children they vary greatly in how impaired they are. Families where the children are all on the spectrum, but very different in how high functioning they are, is not an indication at all of relation, to you? Don't take my word for it, there are many documented cases of this, you shouldn't have too much trouble finding information on it. You have either not done research, or you don't know how to do it properly. Even wikipedia will tell you that you're wrong, with proper sources to boot.

  41. Disease vs. how people are by alexhmit01 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    People are different. The heavy rush of attempts to narrowly define normal and drug people into changing is disturbing. Take ADHD and other "diagnosis." At what percentage of showing up is something no longer legitimately a disorder, and rather is a type of person.

    As a parent, I'm extremely nervous when we let people define "normal" and call everyone outside of normal a "disorder" that needs treatment. When you start with treating genetic code, there is a fine difference between treating a disease (a good thing), and fundamentally changing a child because they aren't how you want.

    I notice that there is a lot of straw man stereotyping of people "religious types two posts ago" and from you "stupid idiots that ought to be arrested for severe child abuse." I've also noticed the people who feel other parents should be arrested for doing things that they don't approve of generally don't have children.

    There was a time that people were allowed to be different. They might be mocked, ostracized, or made fun of, but being different and having different values shouldn't be criminal. There is no "one right way" to raise children.

    The human gene pool is pretty shallow as is, this rush to eugenically change things isn't necessarily good for the species.

    1. Re:Disease vs. how people are by happyemoticon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The comparison to ADHD is false. In many cases I have seen, "hyperactivity" is simply the result of having a smart, energetic kid in a classroom where an authoritarian teacher refuses to let them excel.

      I believe that my experiences as a person who still struggles for social success, but, perhaps as a consequence of this, does not struggle in other areas gives me some room to comment on this. As I am - that is, I can be sociable but with effort - I would not trade my advantages for greater sociability and less anxiety around people. However, were I more socially handicapped, to degree of a person with autism or Asperger's, my response would probably be different. If someone is going to be so handicapped that they require lifelong supervision, or that they cannot have meaningful relationships with others, it is probably best to intervene.

      It is unfortunate that we cannot simply ask the child in question which they would prefer, and we cannot possibly anticipate what is truly at stake - that is, how profound their condition will ultimately be, and how they might be if they were "neurotypical". The issue is further complicated by the fact that autistic-advocacy groups desire to elevate their condition from a disease to a way of life. However, any group of people united by some factor will seek to validate themselves, so I do not think that this opinion is really valid in the same way as an objective analysis of how the child's life might turn out, and though they may have interesting (if odd) capabilities, I do not think I would trade places with an autistic person. Is this a chilling thought? Well, perhaps, but sometimes you have to make hard decisions as a parent.

    2. Re:Disease vs. how people are by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People are different. The heavy rush of attempts to narrowly define normal and drug people into changing is disturbing. Take ADHD and other "diagnosis." At what percentage of showing up is something no longer legitimately a disorder, and rather is a type of person. As a parent, I'm extremely nervous when we let people define "normal" and call everyone outside of normal a "disorder" that needs treatment. When you start with treating genetic code, there is a fine difference between treating a disease (a good thing), and fundamentally changing a child because they aren't how you want. I hate to be an ass (that's a lie, I love being an ass). But what you just said reveals an astonishingly shallow understanding of what disease and chromosomal disorders are. It reads a lot like you've been exposed to a lot of feel good literature reruns of "Life Goes On' and Oprah. Please, don't confuse the issue. Sure the ADHD diagnosis is abused, but that doesn't mean that there isn't a legitimate problem to be solved. Just because a zygote managed to divide and survive into an independant (at least at the cellular level) organism doesn't mean that is the way they're "supposed' to be. The line isn't fine, shit is broke. You can test for it. It lives, but it's busted. Hiding behind this falacy of destiny in order to protect yourself the notion that your body fucked up it's primary mission doesn't make it better. The sick part is the persistance in denying children treatment in order to protect your own pride.

      I notice that there is a lot of straw man stereotyping of people "religious types two posts ago" and from you "stupid idiots that ought to be arrested for severe child abuse." I've also noticed the people who feel other parents should be arrested for doing things that they don't approve of generally don't have children. Pot meet kettle. I don't generally approve of molesting children either but I don't have them so maybe it's ok? You don't have to shit out a kid to know right from wrong. I'll grant you that the culture in the US at least is a little too interested in dictating how you should raise your children but context makes your point irrelevant. Mostly because in these cases I am the one who ultimately bears the cost of your strange fruit, and it's is really god damned expensive.

      There was a time that people were allowed to be different. They might be mocked, ostracized, or made fun of, but being different and having different values shouldn't be criminal. There is no "one right way" to raise children. There's quite a gulf between a quirk of personality and suffering brought on by a malformed protein. During "those times", those "good old days" third parties didn't pay to have the "different" people's asses wiped and faces fed. And here you are again confusing the issue. People (or life in general) aren't very good at replicating. Shit goes wrong a lot of the time. Now we can work around a lot of those things these days. It is universally a net good, and a sight better than the old treatment of tossing them in the river and giving it another go. Speaking of, have you seen the typical Adult Family Home? I'd rather be thrown in the river.

      The human gene pool is pretty shallow as is, this rush to eugenically change things isn't necessarily good for the species. A. The human gene pool... now you're just making things up. B. If you knew anything about eugenics you wouldn't have said the things you did. C. Who cares about the species when your 24 year old "kid" screams like a banshee and shits himself when you tell him "no".
    3. Re:Disease vs. how people are by ppanon · · Score: 3, Informative

      The comparison to ADHD is false. In many cases I have seen, "hyperactivity" is simply the result of having a smart, energetic kid in a classroom where an authoritarian teacher refuses to let them excel.
      And a large portion of the other time, it's kids who are hopped on refined sugars because its a substantial ingredient to all the off-the-shelf packaged meals fed to them by their working parents.

      Apparently I was quite hyperactive when I was a kid. Then my parents cut out sweets and pop and I became a lot more manageable without any setback to my intellectual or physical development. To this day, most frozen prepared foods or desserts taste too sweet to me. They get prepared with lots of sugars and MSG because they are cheaper than real spices for making something taste less bland. I also can't stand the chemical after-taste from most "sugar-free" drinks and foods; that's probably not a bad thing.

      Some people wonder why the western world has an epidemic of diabetic and obese people, but it's not a big mystery to me. Some form of sugar is in most things you buy pre-packaged: frozen dinners, hamburger patties, spaghetti sauce, most other sauces, salad dressings, etc. Go back to basics and cook with spices and simple ingredients. If you only have time to by pre-packaged meals, refuse to buy any with sugars in it (sucrose, fructose, high-fructose corn syrup, etc.). Wean your kids off sugar and, in the long run, they'll thank you, though your dentist probably won't.
      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    4. Re:Disease vs. how people are by ppanon · · Score: 1

      P.S. The other thing that baffles me, particularly as someone who is allergic to milk protein, is why the heck lactose and whey get added to so many things that you wouldn't expect them in.

      Why, for instance is the Plain/Salt & Pepper potato chip flavour often the only type of potato chip that doesn't contain whey? Why the heck does Miss Vickies put whey in Jalapeno or Sea Salt and Malt Vinegar potato chips? Come on!

      On second thought, it's probably like sugar, something that triggers an accelerated digestion process so that you wind up eating more (and thus buy more).

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    5. Re:Disease vs. how people are by Spazntwich · · Score: 1
      Absolute bullshit. Diabetes, obesity, yes those are the (partial) fault of refined sugars (in addition to increasingly sedentary lives and our ability to help the supermorbidly obese and diabetics live longer), but sugar does not bear the responsibility for anyone's hyperactivity.

      Do sugars cause hyperactivity?

      In the 1970s, anecdotal reports suggested sugars cause hyperactivity in children. Research, however, failed to confirm this theory. Hyperactivity was not seen in children after consistent high intakes or single large doses of sugars.

      In a recent study, researchers examined the effect of eating sucrose (table sugar) on the behavior of children aged 6 to 10 years. The children were chosen for the study because their parents believed the children reacted negatively to sucrose. Preschool children were also studied. They are often considered sensitive to some foods. The researchers found no differences in the behavior of the children when they ate higher-than-normal amounts of sucrose compared to when they ate diets low in sucrose.

      Actually, this and other research suggests sugars tend to calm both children and adults. This effect could go unnoticed due to other influences. For instance, the excitement of a birthday party or Halloween could override the calming effect of sugars.
      Don't mean to be harsh, but as a student of physiology and all that I hate to see people spreading misinformation.
    6. Re:Disease vs. how people are by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Sure, so I guess my parents' personal observations of my behaviour are crap. Never mind that my mother and father were scientifically trained as a pharmacist and an engineer.

      Your response is kind of like the one I got from my doctor who assured me 5 years ago that a flu immunizations couldn't have aggravated my chronic fatigue and that milk products couldn't possibly be a factor either. The latter was after I had seen a naturopath who had put me on a reduction diet and I had had repeated direct observations of the negative effects of reintroducing milk products in my diet.

      Today the chronic fatigue is in remission and under careful maintenance because I ignored the advice of that doctor. There also is increasingly more clinical evidence that chronic fatigue is often tied to an immune system malfunction. So, could flu shots, which heighten the immune system response, negatively affect someone with chronic fatigue? Damn straight.

      Do I trust my father and mother's personal observations that cutting sugar out of my diet made a big difference in my behaviour? Yeah. It may not be the case for everyone (I've also always been very sensitive to most stimulants and am even more susceptible after getting CFS), but it sure is the case for some.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    7. Re:Disease vs. how people are by Spazntwich · · Score: 1

      Oh, you're into voodoo magic. I guess there's no reasoning with you, especially considering your instant response to my scientific refutation of your anecdotal evidence was to clam up into defensive mode and sling more anecdotal evidence my way.

      As my link mentioned, there is anecdotal evidence to support your claims, but parents aren't the most objective observers. Placebo effect may have worked for you, but for the sake of general knowledge please stop spreading misinformation like "sugar causes hyperactivity" when the opposite effect has been more frequently observed. It does nobody any favors.

    8. Re:Disease vs. how people are by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Oh, you're into voodoo magic. I guess there's no reasoning with you, especially considering your instant response to my scientific refutation of your anecdotal evidence was to clam up into defensive mode and sling more anecdotal evidence my way.

      No, I'm not into voodoo magic; you're thinking of my sister who, while probably smarter and definitely more creative than me, is nowhere as skeptical and discerning. I'm into finding solutions to a problem based on personal empirical observation. If the medical advice I get isn't working or downright counter-productive, then I look at alternatives and I judge them for reasonableness and whether I can think of a viable physical mechanism for how they function. I don't blindly accept concepts like "chi"/energy flows, body meridians, etc. at face value. However I also don't ignore the possible health benefits from Tai Chi, meditation, and other mind/body integration techniques can have in controlling and relieving stress and reducing stress hormones that can reduce the body's recovery mechanisms, regardless of whether the underlying "theories" behind those techniques are badly flawed.

      When I got sick with CFS, the widely accepted "medical" judgement was that it was a psychosomatic illness. I rejected it because it did not correspond to the pattern of symptoms that I was observing in my body.
      I love cheese and butter and was certainly not happy with having to cut them out of my diet. There wasn't much of a "placebo effect" in having to cut it out when reintroducing it caused gas, diarrhoea, decreased my night sleep cycle from 6 hours to 4 hours, and caused daytime quasi-narcoleptic symptoms.

      I also don't see how removing sugar from my diet could have been a "placebo effect" when a) I didn't realize it was being done because I was to young and b) I wasn't told about it until about 30 years later.
      Besides, placebo effects happen when you are given a sugar pill to make you believe that you've been given medication, not when sugar is taken away. :-)

      So if my personal scientific observations conflict with those of scientists who either have a large egotistical involvement in their pet theory (as did the psychologists and psychiatrists promoting the psychosomatic theory of CFS, many of who carefully selected their test subjects to match their theories and ignored more recent micro-array genetic expression test results) or whose research is sometimes paid for by industrial groups with large monetary interests in the results, well I'll trust my small scale science, thank you.
      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    9. Re:Disease vs. how people are by Spazntwich · · Score: 1

      Try to stay on point here. Your self-treatment with milk has no relevance to how incorrect you are with spreading such information about sugar turning kids hyperactive.

      It's all I asked you to do. Please stop with the red herrings and misleading hapless parents into needless anxiety and false hope associated with sugar.

    10. Re:Disease vs. how people are by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Hmm. I think you have made some good points and I would amend my previous statement to "sometimes sugar can cause hyperactivity".

      I remember hearing about some research decades ago where they had done studies of infant reaction to stimuli and how it later correlated to child and adult behaviour. Infants that quickly became overstimulated and upset by crib activity centres grew up to be introverts, whereas infants who actively played and were fascinated by the colours and sounds of those activity centres became more extroverted.

      So I can see how a child's natural susceptibility to stimulants would affect their response to sugar. An introverted child would be more likely to get overexcited by sugar and become troublesome, whereas an extroverted child might need extra stimulation and sugar might help provide it it somewhat and decrease their need to seek it out in other ways, making them less disruptive.

      That would certainly give confusing results, and a double blind study with random children might tend to indicate that sugar is calming since a higher percentage of the population is extroverted. However, my question is, are a substantial portion of the children diagnosed with ADHD introverts on a sugar high? I haven't yet had time to look at that study you referenced and hope to do so later, but how were the children for that sugar study selected? Were they all diagnosed with ADHD or were they a random sample of the general population? Because I know how I would select them if I wanted to improve my chances of a certain outcome.

      No matter what the answers to those questions, there's gotta be more healthy ways to keep extroverted children stimulated and participating in and outside of school than feeding them sugar.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
  42. as a person with MILD autism i must say by yahurd · · Score: 0

    absolutely nothing at all.

  43. Hail Science! by r_jensen11 · · Score: 1

    So, when can we expect giant otters to run the world?

  44. Thwart Creativity? Potential Abuse? by twitter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's very good that non functional people can be brought into consciousness but the BBC description of the symptoms, cause and cure show potential for massive abuse:

    They found that inhibiting the enzyme stopped mice with Fragile X Syndrome behaving in erratic ways. Prior to treatment they showed signs of hyperactivity, purposeless and repetitive movements.

    People with Fragile X Syndrome have more dendritic spines than usual, but each is longer and thinner, and transmits weaker electric signals.

    Using purposeless and repetitive movements as markers for disease is frightenting. Children need those to develop muscles and co-ordination. Most adults would be better off not suppressing them as well.

    Changing the structure of a person's mind is an even more frightening prospect. How do we know that the extra connections are not in some way useful? Could they be responsible for creativity and problem solving? This kind of treatment should be very carefully applied and only to those who are obviously bad off. A significant further ethical problem is one of long term efficacy and dependency explored in novels like Flowers for Algernon.

    Society has already demonstrated it's willingness to abuse drugs in the name of conformity against hyperactivity. There is no doubt that too many children are medicated. The effects of those drugs are mild compared to this new class. It would be sad if society takes to altering people's brain structure they way it has taken to feeding kids uppers. The BBC's descriptions are right in line with that outcome.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  45. Wait.. by Adambomb · · Score: 1

    But did you stay in a Holiday Inn Express last night?

    --
    Ice Cream has no bones.
  46. There is hope... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for George W Bush yet!

  47. Chris Benoit was a great man. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He forever revolutionized the way we think about sex with corded spheres.

  48. Too bad they don't employ the tactic on themselves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice try to try to turn autism into a genetic defect, but all the genetic defects that have been placed under the "autism" umbrella have their own names. Real autism is not a genetic defect.

  49. On forcing cures by Anonymous+McCartneyf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is it too much to make sure that the cure not be worse than the disease?
    The fella who invented the lobotomy got a Nobel Prize. Lobotomies were very effective at controlling emotions that were otherwise hard to control--this is before the modern psych drug was invented. But it cut a few nerves critical to normal social functioning in the process.
    There is also the paradox of anti-depressants spurring suicidal thoughts, and the problem of older anti-depressants depressing every variety of thought. Those drugs were and are very nearly forced on people when the conditions they treat are caught, but I'm not certain that it's always to the best for the patients.
    This fragile-X cure also messes with nerves fairly directly. The BBC suggests that this shouldn't make any variants of the lobotomy problem--we're talking redardation-autism, not Aspergerish autism--but some of us do want to be sure the side-effects aren't worse than the disease.

    --
    There is a fine line between recklessness and courage... -- Paul McCartney
  50. Re:Thwart Creativity? Potential Abuse? by BungaDunga · · Score: 1

    The last BBC article related to autism described people with it as "unable to form meaningful relationships".

    Google cache:
    "People with autism cannot relate to others in a meaningful way. They also have trouble making sense of the world at large.

    As a result, their ability to develop friendships is impaired. They also have a limited capacity to understand other people's feelings. "
    http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:XU_409HuLZIJ:n ews.bbc.co.uk/2/low/health/6221064.stm+BBC+autism+ meaningful&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=2&gl=us&client=firefox -a

    Jeez, talk about misinformation. I've Asperger's Syndrome and I certainly have meaningful relationships. Obviously my situation is much different from people with really severe autism but I would hazard that every autistic person can relate to someone in a way that is meaningful to them, even if it doesn't look like it to an outside observer.

    The article's been changed to say "People with autism can have difficulties relating to - and understanding the feelings - of others. For some, this can make it tough to develop friendships, and to make sense of the world at large." Much better.

  51. But autistic mice don't *have* social habits... by Anonymous+McCartneyf · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's easier than it looks.
    People with severe autism have no social life, for various reasons.
    Mice with active cases of "severe autism" likely also have no social life. Keep them in cages with other mice, and it should be easy to tell which mice couldn't care less that there are other mice in their cages.
    If an experimental treatment suddenly makes an "autistic" mouse notice and care that there are other mice in its cage, then it is treating the autism.

    --
    There is a fine line between recklessness and courage... -- Paul McCartney
  52. Well obviously... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... he would know that she would not approve of his decision to kill the boy... so he took the simple decision to kill her too...

    The whole thing of course is a tragedy. God will judge, not you.

    1. Re:Well obviously... by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      The whole thing of course is a tragedy. God will judge, not you.

      Damn straight we will. What are you, some kind of holy nihilist?

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  53. It's a joke - LAUGH by Bombula · · Score: 1

    I'm astonished nobody got the Rainman "definitely" joke from my original post. Not modded funny, and no mentioned of it in posted replies. Maybe everyone reading and posting is ... autistic?

    --
    A-Bomb
    1. Re:It's a joke - LAUGH by HellYeahAutomaton · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but its not a funny one, and most of you assholes posting do think it is acceptable to make fun of people with disabilities, or conditions beyond their control.

      You sir, are an asshole. Now grow up.

  54. Good news by JimiSpier · · Score: 0

    For my son and my neighbor's kid. They both have a form of Autism called Aspergers. I am praying that this will help them both one day. My son is a very brilliant sweet boy and is fine the way he is. But I want him to be able to have better coping skills for a world that will put him down for not being like everyone else.
    I hope this does build the road to helping people.

    --
    Jimi Spier
    www.jimispier.com - My tunes
    1. Re:Good news by jeiler · · Score: 1

      Hi, Jimi. The specific genetic disorder that they're talking about is not what causes all forms of autism--they're dealing with one specific kind of autism that's something entirely different. However (as someone who also has Asperger's) my hat is off to you for accepting your son as he is. :)

      --

      If you haven't been down-modded lately, you aren't trying.

      Sacred cows make the best hamburger.

    2. Re:Good news by JimiSpier · · Score: 0

      Thank you, that was one of the most compassionate replies I have seen.

      --
      Jimi Spier
      www.jimispier.com - My tunes
  55. Mirror neuron theory by Cattus+Curiosus · · Score: 1

    One theory of autism that has received a fair amount of attention in the past few years is that autistic spectrum disorders may result from mirror neuron dysfunction. The mirror neuron system is thought to allow humans (and some primates) to mentally simulate the actions of others, thereby allowing greater understanding of their intentions and motivations. Preliminary results (PDF) indicate that this system may be impaired in individuals with ASD, resulting in characteristic social deficits as the result of inability to internally simulate observed actions.

    --
    Snowclone is the new clich
  56. The DEVESTATING effects of this "science." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No. No seriously. This is bad. Do you guys realize what we could potentially be depriving the world of here? There are two things in life that no matter what, will always be funny. Farts, and retards. It's a slippery slope from here fellas. Once the retards are gone, these "scientists," these comedy haters, are going to set their sites on gas. I don't want to live in a world without stories of my best friend getting licked by a retard in high school. I don't want to live in a world where I can no longer fart on my chihuahuas just to see what kind of face they'll make.

    So think of your dreams. Think of all your love and ambition for life. If you want your voice heard, if you want to share the beauty of your soul and give hope and aspiration to all those around you; if you want to embrace the dignity of humanity and change the world, please... fart on a retard.

    1. Re:The DEVESTATING effects of this "science." by Quill_28 · · Score: 1

      Oh no, there will always be you to laugh at.

  57. "Colour blind" can be rewarding too by Moraelin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    On the other hand it could be something like being color-blind your entire life only to wake some morning to find the whole spectrum of colors and a new wave of positive experiences.

    If Asperger's is like being colour blind, well, I can say that sometimes I'm happy to not see those colours.

    1. I hear or read expressions every day to the effect of "he had an honest face", "he looked sincere" or "he had a poker face" or "said it with a straight face", or the fateful step forward from there: "I'd know if he was lying to me." For me that just doesn't exist, but I'll choose to believe that the people saying that stuff actually know what they're talking about. Or maybe it's wishful thinking and make belief for them too, I wouldn't know.

    Either way, then I see people falling for the most unbelievable lies, either from the local sociopath or from the the nice IBM/MS/whatever salesman, because, hey, he was "looking honest" and saying that crap "with a straight face" and generally giving the "right signals." It's typically stuff you'd think noone with half a brain would actually believe, if they only engaged their logic for a second. But they believe it anyway, because someone deliberately fed them the false body language signals.

    I've known and been around people whose main skill and way to make a living was, basically, giving whatever body language signals they wanted to give. Saying the most mind-boggling lies "with a straight face" and "looking honest", "looking hurt" when they wanted to look hurt, or even getting tears in their eyes on demand. (That last one I can actually tell.) And people swallowed it all hook, line and sinker, because, hey, their instincts tell them to trust that nice person now, to try to cheer them up the next moment, and god knows what else.

    Me, I don't even see that kind of stuff, I have to trust other people when they assure me that the nice salesman definitely looked sincere when he sold them that crap. My natural instinct would be to just take that series of statements for what it _is_, and see if it actually produces the conclusion I'm fed. Instead of getting stuck on taking dumb shortcuts like "it must be true, because he looks honest" or "naah, it would be mean of me to hurt him more by dissecting what he just said."

    In effect, I'm naturally shielded from what, as far as I can extrapolate, seems to be a very common form of deception. I'm "colour-blind" (metaphorically speaking) in a world where it seems rather common for some people to use colours for deception, deceit, fraud. I can be thankful for that.

    2. It seems a rather common trend for Asperger's Syndrome people to be, abover all else, logical, fascinated by one or more narrow scientific domains, and prone to hyper-focus when working on that domain.

    It's, if you will, like distributing stat points or traits in a D&D-type game. You take some points from here, and put them in that other stat. Or like when you roll a mage instead of a warrior, you lose HP and armour class, but gain spells.

    Ok, maybe not the best analogy, but you surely understand what I mean: it's not just a handicap, we got something else in return. We're the guys who were _fascinated_ by how a radio works, or by assembly language, while the other kids were playing popularity games. We're the guys who (assuming we found a willing listener) were talking about the differences between Haskel and Prolog, while the other teenagers were debating whether Jane or Amy is more fashionable. We're the guys who go into a hyper-focus trance and produce a big block of code, or the proof of a theorem, while the rest of the gang plods through changing an if here and a sign there and see if it worked. Etc.

    Admittedly, it's not for everyone, and I'm not saying everyone should be like that. If your goal is to get into higher management, for example, honestly, you won't have much of a chance as an AS, and chances are you wouldn't enjoy that kind of a job anyway. On the other hand, for

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    1. Re:"Colour blind" can be rewarding too by Your.Master · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree with your main point, but to quibble, your argument that you'd rather have Asperger's on the basis that you don't get fooled by a straight face seems a bit like an illiterate person being glad he can't read because he's heard that the newspapers print lies and half-truths, and he doesn't have to deal with that.

      It's a factor to take into consideration that a large number of people cannot be very deceptive without giving some outward signs that most attentive people can pick up on. It's a piece of evidence that you are discarding as worthless on the basis of the fact that the evidence isn't, in and of itself, conclusive.

      I will agree that people often overemphasize that particular piece of evidence.

      My disclosure: I stopped speaking at all for a spell between ages 3 and 4 (1987-1988), and so as different doctors tried to figure me out I was repeatedly diagnosed with autism and then undiagnosed when they ran some test and decided I wasn't autistic after all.

    2. Re:"Colour blind" can be rewarding too by OnanTheBarbarian · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I hate to burst your bubble here, but plenty of people exist who can bang out a big block of code or a theorem and are also socially acute. There isn't a zero-sum game going on here between empathy on the one hand and ability to focus on difficult things on the other. There's no tradeoff between artistic ability and mathematical ability. Attractive people or athletes aren't necessarily dumb.

      I'm sure the zero-sum idea is a pleasant consolation, but it's not true. If it's like AD&D, it's more like barebones first edition 3d6 character creation: some people really do happen to roll all 16-18's, and some people don't have their weaknesses balanced by much of anything.

      Most of the totally curve-busting smart people that I have known (from top-tier research labs, grad schools, and from the very upper ranks of undergraduate populations at large universities) have also been quite socially adept or at least, no more than a bit shy and awkward. A number are also quite gifted artistically or athletically, too.

    3. Re:"Colour blind" can be rewarding too by HappyEngineer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Most of the totally curve-busting smart people that I have known (from top-tier research labs, grad schools, and from the very upper ranks of undergraduate populations at large universities) have also been quite socially adept or at least, no more than a bit shy and awkward. A number are also quite gifted artistically or athletically, too.
      Odd. That's the opposite of my experience. Every "curve busting" person that I've ever known has also been socially awkward. I have never met a math or physics professor who was an outgoing social person. I've grown to associate social adeptness with lack of depth of skill. That's obviously not fair, but I can only evaluate people based on my experience and in my experience social skill and deep technical/scientific/mathematical skills are associated with lack of social skills.
    4. Re:"Colour blind" can be rewarding too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      My friend's father is color blind in that he can only see primary colors. As a child there was no known "cure" for this "handicap". After attaining his degree he took up a career in the U.S. Army. He served 28 years serving two years as a Captain in Vietnam. While in Vietnam, since he only sees in primary colors, he could easily visually separate camouflaged soldiers/snipers from the jungle, single them out and direct his men to kill them first. His "handicap" was a Godsend for hundreds if not thousands and what he attributes to saving his life. In retrospect a "cure" would have likely killed him.

    5. Re:"Colour blind" can be rewarding too by fenrisulfur · · Score: 1

      I know a lot of math professor that are social outgoing persons, in fact what I have seen of math prof. they are more often outgoing but chemists on the other hand are often what you call "strange", but that is just my opinion.

    6. Re:"Colour blind" can be rewarding too by suv4x4 · · Score: 1

      And my take is: need both kinds of people, basically. Turning everyone into the same kind of "normal" person might just deprive society of some valuable skills and inclination. Turning "nerds" into "normal" persons would be as useful as the reverse: turning all artist types into mathematicians. You'd just lose a bunch of skills, and make the world more boring as a whole too.

      So we're basically differentiating slowly into multiple subspecies. Spooky, huh.

    7. Re:"Colour blind" can be rewarding too by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      There's an interesting article in this week's New Yorker about using fMRI to detect lies, because, as lots and lots of research indicates, people are terrible at it. They THINK they're good, but they suck: the studies indicated that people correctly guessed when someone was lying about 53% of the time. People look for outward signs, as you say, but the problem is that they make assumptions about what those signs are, and many other people either don't make those signs, or don't, apparently, make any sort of unconscious nonverbal-communication signs whatsoever that they're lying. They just do it. As the article says, the feedback mechanism is terrible: 99% of the time people tell the truth so you don't have an attentive filter, you never know if you've been fooled by a good lie, and false positives and false negatives overwhelm actual lies.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    8. Re:"Colour blind" can be rewarding too by Qwaniton · · Score: 1

      Just because mathematicians are all so schizoid it's uncomfortable to hang around them doesn't mean they're the only geniuses on a college campus. In fact, perhaps their failure to understand anything more "real" than the most abstract of the abstract is a weakness.

  58. My son is autistic by mcneely.mike · · Score: 1

    and if i could sign him up for a cure, HELL YES I WOULD! You all have no idea what it can be like... there are times he sleeps 4 to 5 hours a night 4 to 5 nights in a row and DOES NOT NAP DURING THE DAY. Try to work a full time job when you are exhausted completely. Mentally speaking, I can be a mush head. Then, most of the day he cannot entertain himself because he has little to no imagination... he will not get together with friends to play tag, etc. His family are his friends, and we have to spend almost all our time entertaining him. If my wife and i leave him to go move furniture or something together, we can come back to find him climbing over the top railing of the stairs. He would fall to his death because he has no fears and no idea that he could come to harm. So one of us watches him almost constantly.
    HELL YES, BRING IT ON BABY. B R I N G I T O N !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! AND JESUS, PLEASE HURRY!

    --
    soylentnews.org Go there to enjoy the people!
    1. Re:My son is autistic by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      First: out of curiosity, how old is your son?

      Second, while I can understand your concern with him climbing over stair railings and such, and I can certainly empathize with the strain that having a child like this must put on your life (I'm having similar, though less severe, issues sharing a house with some younger friends who won't let me get any sleep), it disturbs me that the main concern you're expressing here is about how your son's condition disturbs your life, not about his well-being. Perhaps your son is perfectly happy how he is and wouldn't like to be changed?

      I'm also interested in this issue with the stair railings, which is why I'm curious as to your son's age. While I haven't gone in to be diagnosed formally, I seem to have many of the typical autism-spectrum symptoms. I'm easily over-stimulated by lights, noises, clutter, etc, uncomfortable in unfamiliar crowds, asocial, etc; I like dark, calm, quiet, clean places away from other people where I can focus on one activity. Thinking about how you say your son has no fear (of heights, in your example), I realize that I too have always been rather fearless of such things, and both as a child and today I was always up on a cliff or tree in the mountains or far out in the water at the ocean, which always frightened my parents, but I had (more then than now) an acute sense of where my limits were and what I could do safely. I guess what I'm saying is, while I can understand your concern for his safety, maybe he does know what he's doing. But again, a lot of this depends on how old he is.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    2. Re:My son is autistic by mcneely.mike · · Score: 1

      Hi. My son is 7. Our house is a jail. There are locks on everything. We are concerned about his well-being. If there were no locks, we might not wake up if he didn't have to rattle his bedroom door (we have a hook and eye latch on his door for HIS safety). If we didn't wake up, he might fall down the stairs (we would have to put the baby gate back up which he would just climb over). If the back doors weren't locked at all times, he would run out-side where he might go on the road (a busy highway). We had to put a gate across our back yard to keep him from running to the lake (where he might fall onto the rocks off our (small) cliff, or drown himself) because my wife broke her ankle a couple years back and cannot catch him if he runs (her ankle has never healed properly).

      Where to continue.
      We have tried different drugs and therapies, one which was supposed to calm him (one teeny-teeny drop) but did the exact opposite to the point where he literally spent an hour spinning in circles. When my wife asked him if he thought the drug was doing anything helpful for him he told her (on his computer type machine called a Voca) he 'told' her 'NO' by pushing his no icon.

      Where to continue.

      We ARE concerned for him, and concerned for his future. We know he is very smart, but he is non-verbal (for the most part, but he is talking more than he used to. the school system SUCKS for non-verbal autistic kids. We see the frustration he has when trying to communicate at times. I too have some autistic tendencies (i guess that's why i'm on slashdot and use gnu/linux) and i can be frustrated with myself at times.

      I love my son, but sometimes feel like he is killing me and my marriage. My wife (a saint for sure) bears the blunt of his waking in the middle of the night etc, but it is hard when he goes to sleep at 10 pm and wakes up at 2 or 3 am. Try having alone time when you are both frustrated with jobs, life, everything.

      Then again, we can have some wonderful times! If we were to win the lottery, alot of problems would go away... no worries about jobs, get him the therapy he needs (eg. aba/ibi), get some respite. that would ease things immensely.

      just ranting. thanks.

      --
      soylentnews.org Go there to enjoy the people!
  59. Re:Now that's just selfish by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

    Actually, MIT is 45% female. I'd suspect Georgia Tech(25% female) and Caltech(15% female) have more trouble finding dates...

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    Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
  60. Re:It's a joke - LAUGH (cry me a river...) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can't tell ME what's funny!

  61. Let's not hit the panic button yet... by Captain+Sarcastic · · Score: 1

    Bear in mind that the symptoms listed in the article are almost certainly NOT an exhaustive list. These are only some of the indications that a physician might use to test for the "weakened X" disorder. A complete list, however, would only end up boring most of the people who read the article, so I'm willing to forgive some incompleteness in a popular general news presentation.

    And yes, society has jumped quickly onto bandwagons, as you've properly pointed out, and I agree that there is at least one instance where a child was medicated to become more socially convenient, rather than using more conventional treatments like therapy. But until doctors start using articles in the popular media as a source for definitive indicators of illness / dysfunction / what have you, I'm not going to let it ruin my sleep yet.

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    Strike while the irony is hot! -- The Freethinker
  62. Re:really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Troll. Ugly troll.

  63. How to tell when a mouse is tripping by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 2, Funny

    The pointer keeps going to a corner.

    --
    You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
  64. Steroid link? by Myria · · Score: 1

    Steroids were found in his home. Given that so many athletes have autistic children, has there been any inquiry into whether steroids are linked to having autistic children?

    --
    "Screw Sun, cross-platform will never work. Let's move on and steal the Java language." - Visual J++ Product Manager
  65. Social perception isn't the same as blind trust by loqi · · Score: 1

    I hear or read expressions every day to the effect of "he had an honest face", "he looked sincere" or "he had a poker face" or "said it with a straight face", or the fateful step forward from there: "I'd know if he was lying to me." For me that just doesn't exist
    It doesn't really exist for anyone. No matter where you fall on the autism spectrum, you still have to deal with deceit if you're dealing with human beings, and the principles are more or less the same in any medium. I'm sure there are plenty of aspies out there who swallow the more ridiculous-tinted information floating around the internets.

    We're the guys who (assuming we found a willing listener) were talking about the differences between Haskel and Prolog, while the other teenagers were debating whether Jane or Amy is more fashionable. We're the guys who go into a hyper-focus trance and produce a big block of code, or the proof of a theorem, while the rest of the gang plods through changing an if here and a sign there and see if it worked. Etc.
    Wow, with that many cookie-cutter stereotypes flying around I'm surprised I didn't see any taped-together glasses. Part of being honest with yourself is avoiding false "bright sides" to your self-perceived flaws, and you seem to have both painted a pretty rosy view of "geekdom", and declared your particular neural flavor to be synonymous with it. The previous reply was right, I call zero-sum-bullshit.
    --
    If other reasons we do lack, we swear no one will die when we attack
    1. Re:Social perception isn't the same as blind trust by Moraelin · · Score: 1

      Heh, yes, everyone loves to say that social perception isn't the same as blind trust, but funny how it actually gets to work that way. The more someone is convinced that, basically, "nah, I'd know it if he was lying to me", the more they seem to trust that instinct instead of actually engaging the cortex. So you watch someone go and shovel so much bullshit on them that you're rolling for willpower to not burst into laughter, and they swallow it hook, line and sinker anyway.

      I've actually watched demonstrations of it. First time was in the army, when our platoon pulled the guard duty. So part of it was being inspected first and asked to say what you're guarding, what you have to do, etc. One of my coleagues made a bet that he'll tell the officers the most unbelievable bullshit and get away with it. So he ends up telling a colonel (and a colonel who'd been in that unit for years, I might add) that he has to guard stuff that was in the opposite corners of the compound (thus no one guard post could _possibly_ guard all those), and some stuff that didn't even exist, and some stuff that was blatantly absurd. All while looking him right in the eyes and looking and sounding like the perfect soldier, or so everyone assured me. Not only he got away with it, he got congratulated and given as an example of how a soldier should learn his duties.

      Go figure.

      That said, hey, I said I was immune to _a_ form of deceit, not to all of them. I'm sure I've been lied to before, but at least someone had to at least do the minimal effort of putting together something that looks _logical_, instead of being just a well choreographed show. Sure, someone can still use made up statistics, made up studies to base their logic on, etc. At some point I'll run out of time and attention span to cross-check it all, like everyone else.

      If you will, like a "bullet proof" vest still isn't proof against knives, and even as bullets go, it will only stop pistol/SMG ammo. It stops _a_ kind of attack, it doesn't make you invulnerable.

      Still, you know, I can live with an imperfect protection. A lot of (maybe even most) people who seem to be skilled deceivers in person, don't seem to put the extra effort to make it too logical. They seem to be used to noone dissecting their bullshit too much, and genuinely surprised when someone does.

      --
      A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    2. Re:Social perception isn't the same as blind trust by Qwaniton · · Score: 1

      Yeah, Christ, tell me about it. I'm autistic. I figured out how to "see in color", going with this analogy. It's a lot more fun this way. Trust me. This doesn't make me any less of who I am, in fact, it rounds me out a bit more. It's pretty fun being able to walk into a room and immediately see what's on everyone's mind and who stands where on the totem pole. Well, it's normal now, but it was interesting in and of itself at first at least.

    3. Re:Social perception isn't the same as blind trust by loqi · · Score: 1

      So you watch someone go and shovel so much bullshit on them that you're rolling for willpower to not burst into laughter, and they swallow it hook, line and sinker anyway.
      Well, congratulations on not having to worry about being extremely gullible, but the truth is there are plenty of socially-oriented people who still make a habit of "engaging the cortex" when other people talk. If you consider yourself at least even moderately intelligent, then your advantage is likely negligible: you'd still apply reason to the things people tell you.

      I've actually watched demonstrations of it. First time was in the army
      Considering that soldiers are basically trained to directly follow orders, I'd hardly call that a representative environment. That said, there are plenty of ludicrous stories of people swallowing ludicrous stories. Hmm. At any rate, the "sucker" end of the (presumably bell-shaped) gullibility curve will always be around to generate amusing anecdotes.
      --
      If other reasons we do lack, we swear no one will die when we attack
  66. Not that simple, sadly by Moraelin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Unfortunately that's not been my experience, and in a very perverse way: being _perceived_ as great, does not equal actually having the skills.

    So, yes, a lot of people can get a promotion or pass for the great guru, based on being socially adept at deceiving others. That much I'll admit. But when you actually get to see the code they produce, or that they spent a week debugging Java's HashMap because they don't actually have any fucking clue about how a hash table or a linked list work, you start to get the idea that maybe things do balance out.

    (And no, that wasn't a made up example. I've had no less than 4 people so far come to me with "Java's HashMap is broken! It replaced my item with another that has the same hash code!" *Sigh*)

    And I'll tell you one reason why it balances out: there are only 24 hours a day for everyone. Every hour you spend on popularity games, is one less hour you spend on something else, like learning to do your job. There's, if you will, some consolation in being ostracized in that you have that time available for someone else. Maybe a piss-poor consolation, but that's how it works. You have a couple of extra hours to code something or read a book, because you didn't use that time on your social skills.

    Of course, the world isn't neatly divided into 100% ace or 100% incompetent, so there are a lot of people who can be _decent_ at two or more things. But when you really move towards the high end on any skill, you have to dedicate a lot of time to it. Try to do it for several unrelated skills, and you just don't have enough hours in a day for that.

    Also, given that people perform the best at what they like, it would take some kind of mutant that's equally uber-interested in everything to excel at such a broad mix.

    Basically I just don't believe the myth of people who are great, curve-busting even, at a several unrelated skills. It might make for a good unattainable ideal or for superhero comics, but I've yet to even hear of anyone IRL who was actually a great programmer/mathematician/physicist/whatever _and_ the life of the party _and_ a great athlete _and_ god knows what else. Unless they have a time machine and can get 48 hours in a day, it's just not going to happen.

    Which brings us back to the first paragraph: so some people _fake_ it instead. They use their social skills to compensate for the lack of other skills, and basically paint an image of themselves that just isn't true. They'll compensate for their actual programming skill by putting up a careful show and taking credit for someone else's work. They'll compensate for their at best sporadic and mediocre athletic interests by spinning fabulous tales about it. Etc.

    Sure, that can get them actually more appreciated, but it's not actually being curve-busting in those skills.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    1. Re:Not that simple, sadly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "there are only 24 hours a day for everyone" argument is a good one, but in my experience it is weakened by how fast you read and how well you remember. A fast reader covers more skills in less time than a slow reader, and if the fast reader remembers well she or he doesn't waste time on repetition, thus leaving more time to learn and practice to be a sociable person.

    2. Re:Not that simple, sadly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Richard Feynman would be a pretty good example of someone who is gifted both socially and mentally: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surely_You're_Joking, _Mr._Feynman!

    3. Re:Not that simple, sadly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Of course, the world isn't neatly divided into 100% ace or 100% incompetent, so there are a lot of people who can be _decent_ at two or more things. But when you really move towards the high end on any skill, you have to dedicate a lot of time to it. Try to do it for several unrelated skills, and you just don't have enough hours in a day for that."

      Not everyone learns at the same rate. Some folks seem to pick up things incredibly fast while others can't even learn 20% of a skill before giving up.

      "but I've yet to even hear of anyone IRL who was actually a great programmer/mathematician/physicist/whatever _and_ the life of the party _and_ a great athlete _and_ god knows what else. Unless they have a time machine and can get 48 hours in a day, it's just not going to happen."

      I consider myself a great programmer (have 2 university degrees, B.Sc in math and comp science, I love my job). I also can bench over 315 pounds, deadlift 405, squat over 495, etc and I am good looking. How do I do it with only 24 hours a day? Easy. I don't watch TV. I workout 5 times a week right after work for 1 hour (don't go home first, you won't want to workout after). And I still have tons of time left over to spend with my lovely wife. My good looks? Lucky from being born like that and staying active. Oh and I have over 200+ Facebook friends (no random folks) so I'm socially active.

      It's obvious you are speaking from experience in that you haven't met anyone like me before. You probably don't know many people and I assume you don't get out much. Spend more time outside, you will see that there are tons of folks like me around.

  67. Relevant light bulb joke by ajs318 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Q. How many Disabled People's Rights activists does it take to change a light bulb?

    A. It's not the light bulb that needs changing, it's the rest of Society's attitude that needs changing!

    --
    Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  68. Over-diagnosed by n3tcat · · Score: 1

    I seem to remember reading that autism is diagnosed far too often, along with ADD and ADHD, when in reality it's just that kids are just not all the same.

    I'd be worried when we start reengineering people's brains to try to counter a "disease" that is actually just typical childhood. When parents start worrying that their kids aren't "normal" enough, we start to normalize society. When we can't do it through parenting books, then we start to do it through medicine (ritalin?). When medicine doesn't work, we start to alter the kids directly.

    I recall the movie Ghost in the Shell, when the Major Kusanagi is telling Togusa why they hired him. Everyone else on their team is genetically altered and cybernetically enhanced in some way, but he's almost entirely naturally human. He begins to feel this is a weakness, and asks why they chose him. She explains that when you over-specialize, you breed in weakness.

    I think that in trying to "fix" all these maladies, we are in fact over-specializing our race, and there will be even more disasterous weaknesses that will arise in the process.

  69. Alexander Shulgin develops and ingests... by Safiire+Arrowny · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Alexander Shulgin develops and ingests all of the psychoactive drugs that he has invented over the years, and has written two books on the subject; Phenethylamines I've known and loved ( PIHKAL ), and Tryptamines I've known and Loved (TIHKAL).

    He was for a long time given immunity from the law in order to develop and test the substances he made basically by taking either a base phenethylamine or tryptamine molecule and then attaching every possible configuration of atoms around say, a phen's benzine ring and arm, until he exhausted possibilities. All the while he and his wife ate, smoked, and injected various dosages of the substances and recorded the effects.

    So he's basically invented or at least scientificallly documented the effects of a plethora of psychedelic drugs which 95% of the population has never heard of, and some that everyone has heard of.

    Phenethylamines such as MDMA (ecstacy) MDA, MDE, 2-CB, 2-CT7, 2-CI, DOB (Probably the Brown Acid)...

    Tryptamines such as DMT (super powerful psychedelic and neurotransmitter), Ibogaine (being used to cure drug addicts/alcoholics), LSD, Melatonin & Seratonin (neurotransmitters), 5-HO-DMT (psilocin in magic mushrooms)

    So you see, people can just be allowed to test out drugs, especially the willing and chemists who know what they're doing, and have an idea of the effect the substance might have. Because of Shulgin doing that, it has made way for helping a lot of people with depression, post truamatic stress disorder, migrane headaches, addiction, etc, so it is all not just for the sake of tripping out.

    1. Re:Alexander Shulgin develops and ingests... by sjames · · Score: 1

      Shulgin is a fairly prominant exception. However, some of the substances that need testing are significantly more risky than psychedelic variations on a theme. I don't recall the details now, but as I recall a few test subjects in the U.K. had a terrible (and fatal for some) and completely unexpected reaction to an immune system modulator.

    2. Re:Alexander Shulgin develops and ingests... by Anonymous+McCartneyf · · Score: 1

      Yowsa.
      I have a hard time believing that Shulgin could (and did) do a good job personally testing all the psychedelic drugs. I know he must've, but it boggles me.
      Near the end, how could he be sure that he was reacting to the drug he just took and not feeling the effects of an earlier drug flashing over a later, less effective/potent one?

      --
      There is a fine line between recklessness and courage... -- Paul McCartney
  70. Autism coud be prevented altogether by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Autism coud pretty much be prevented altogether anyway. All we woud have to do is encourage women who are pregnant with boy foetuses to get abortions. Problem solved at a stroke (autism only affects boys). Also, as a bonus we get fewer men, which would be a good thing all round. Men commit more crime than women, pollute the environment more than women, and treating men costs the NHS more money than treating women. It's not as if men are particularly necessary anymore anyway; we have machines to do most of the jobs they used to do.

    1. Re:Autism coud be prevented altogether by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope you are trolling. In case you are not, you should know that autism also affects females.

  71. it would be nice by luther349 · · Score: 0

    i agree most people might refuse a cure if there was one. i have a sister with cp and rely if there a was a cure i would push for it. dont get me wrong even if there is never a cure in her lifetime i wouldent love her any less but if there was it would be great for her to have a chance at a normel life. unfortanly shes the type that will need care for her entire life and when my parennts die it falls on me couse im the only other one in the famly that will take it on the rest avoide the issues at all cost. its ture it can be very hard. but shes not the depressed type more the happy type thats always laughing and playful. but i have seen far worse when we take her in for care some of those kids are so depressed and bad temperd i fell bad for the people that have to deal with that everyday. yes i deal with a cp chiled myself but not a depressed angry one so i dont have it to bad.

  72. Clarification (for those who don't get it) by KingSkippus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Just to clarify, because obviously some of you don't get it: I have nothing against autistic people. Some of them are quite cool people. If they make an informed consent to refuse treatment for their condition, good for them, and I support them 100%. But we're not talking about an adult making an informed decision about the state of their own health here. We're talking about someone making a decision about the state of someone else's health based not on what's in the best interests of that person, but their own agenda.

    And let's talk about agendas. The first one presented in the parent's post was religion. This is going to sound harsh, but it needs to be said. The health of your children takes precedence over your own delusions of how you think your god of choice defines moral. Let's say that instead of treating autism, we're talking about taking your son up on a mountaintop and killing him. If Bob the plumber does that and the police find out about it, when he tells them, "God is testing my faith," are they supposed to just say, "Oh, freedom of religion, we can't interfere. By all means, kill your son, Bob."? That's bullshit, and Abraham, who was presented with this situation in the Bible, should have told his petty god to go to hell; he's not going to kill his son.

    Likewise, if you're going to deny treatment of a medical condition to your child because of religion, you should have that child taken away from you because while you're free to practice your religion to your hearts content when it comes to living your life how you want, you're obviously not capable of making responsible, informed decisions for someone else's health. (Sorry Jehovah's Witnesses, but this applies to you when it comes to blood transfusions.) Believe it or not, I highly respect religion, but not when it's causing direct harm to others.

    The other situation presented was the "my child is special and I wouldn't want them any other way" agenda. Notice the wording of that sentence: I wouldn't want them any other way. Notice that a parent who says that isn't talking about what's best for the child; they're talking about what they want. There is a small contingent of people out there who are what I call "sufferers." You know the type, whenever you ask them, "How's it going?" instead of answering "not too bad" like any reasonable person does, they proceed to tell you about their back ache, their car repairs, their plumbing problems, their stupid brother who got arrested, and so on. They're the people who, if they won the lottery, would complain about how much taxes they're having to pay.

    A subset of these people actually get off on being in a constant state of suffering. They love the attention that it brings to them from people who don't know them well. They just love that feeling when someone tells them, "Oh my god, that's awful! You poor thing!" Having a disabled child and not treating them because of this is about as scummy as it gets. If they want to wallow in their misery, I say, fine. But if they want to impose that misery on someone who can't make the decision for himself or herself, that's where I draw the line and say that a baseball bat is appropriate.

    Now, speaking of the misery of autism, I'm not saying that everyone who has autism is miserable. Some of them are pretty much normal, and the cure may in fact be worse than the condition. If parents weigh the risks and benefits and come to the decision that it's not worth it, I'm fine with that, more power to them. But in many cases, autism is not just a matter of a child being different, it's a matter of a child not being able to function in society.

    Is there a gray area? Sure, there almost always is. Should parents get leeway when they're operating within that gray area? You bet. But 1) if a low-risk high-success treatment becomes available, and 2) parents make the decision whether or not to have their child undergo it because of religion or what they want instead of the long-term health and well-being of the child, it's time for the baseball bat.

  73. Experience with Anti-depressants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I had a personal experience with anti-depressants that changed my view on them. It started with some really bad headaches that sent me to the doctor. He spoke to me for about 10 minutes max, with simple questions like, "Are you happy?" The answer was obviously no, since I had a headache for the previous 2 weeks, had lost 10 lbs or more, and had to drop out of college due to missed classes. So I was obviously "depressed". So like a good cult member I drank the Kool-Aid.

    The doctor prescribed Zoloft, in a large once a day dose. After a few days I went back to the doctor to complain about some side effects, muscle ticks/spasms. He said give it another week or so. The Zoloft didn't stop my headache, it just stopped me from caring that my head hurt. Over time I noticed a pattern where I could no longer relate cause and effect. An example is that I am scared of heights. I was on about an 8th floor level exterior, and a friend suggested that I jump. Normally above about the third floor, I would be scraping the wall, not looking. I jumped over the rail and swung around on a pole 8 floors above the ground without a thought.

    It is behavior like this that kills some people who are taking anti-depressants.

  74. Misread title... by BadMrMojo · · Score: 1

    A misread title gives you, ' Altruism Reversed in Mice at MIT Lab'.

    Sounds sort of like most of the people I know at MIT, actually...

  75. You're a wacko by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's this thing about power over one's own body. It's sort of the minimum amount of freedom everyone should be allowed to have. A person is allowed to deny receiving treatment for cancer or anything else for that matter.

    I'm amazed how much you'd like to have power over other peoples bodies, even in a hypothetical situation. You are wasting your time on an idiotic ramble: wait for a cure first, and then let the people decide what they want to do.

    1. Re:You're a wacko by CptPicard · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't think I said anywhere I do not want to give people the freedom over their own bodies. Of course they have the right to refuse treatment if they so choose; but I also can have my own point of view regarding whether such a choice is a rational one, and whether pushing such a POV that outright demonizes treatment through organizations I'm involved in is something I think we should be doing!

      Objectively speaking, I'd rather not be disabled. It is not such a crucial part of who I am that I couldn't leave it behind given the chance. I can't force people to feel otherwise, but I can offer them the chance to be honest about it.

      I'd rather not "wait for a cure" but mobilize resources for finding one. And in the meantime while we don't have it, we can certainly seek to spend our time on more immediate-term projects that improve quality of life... and yes, society's attitudes are a big part of it. Accessibility, for example, enables so much and helps one to help oneself. My problem with the social-model style semantic trickery is that it a) turns a "simple and contained" and possibly resolvable medical issue into one that is rather oppressively all around the individual, pretty much everywhere and b) it makes communication with outsiders so much more difficult because of the impenetrable jargon and conceptualizing...

      You're sounding a lot like some of the activist friends I have who start blaming me for wanting power over them when I'm saying that they might just consider the fact that they are not bound by honor or a desire to seem like some disabled heroes (a bit of a cult within the disabled activist community). They just actively miss the point, like you do.

      --
      I want to play Free Market with a drowning Libertarian.
  76. No such thing as autism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Autism only appeared on the scene around the time schools stopped using the Cane. Coincidence? I think not!

  77. Unfortunately, that's not a rebuttal by Moraelin · · Score: 1

    The "there are only 24 hours a day for everyone" argument is a good one, but in my experience it is weakened by how fast you read and how well you remember. A fast reader covers more skills in less time than a slow reader, and if the fast reader remembers well she or he doesn't waste time on repetition, thus leaving more time to learn and practice to be a sociable person.


    So basically you're telling me that someone smarter will do better than someone dumber. Well, no arguments there as such, but I hope you realize that that's not necessarily an argument for curing autism.

    The problem is that you're talking about two different persons, while I'm essentially talking about the same person with or without Asperger's. Because that's what it boils down to, when discussing a cure. Would the cure also raise their IQ by 25 points or so, so they can maintain the previous level of obsessive learning unchanged _and_ have time to _also_ become a smooth socializer? I seriously doubt that.

    Unless you also figure out a way to raise someone's IQ, it is zero-sum just because it's the same person. Person A devoting 16 hours a day to domain X, ends up better at it than the same person A splitting that time between domains X, Y and Z.

    But let's talk even different persons.

    To be among the top, curve-busting aces at even one domain already involves quite a bit of mental ability for even one domain. Devoting lots of time to it is necessary either way, but won't make one an Einstein if one's handicapped by an IQ of 80. So we're already talking people who have quite a bit of brain power.

    If you want to work and absorb information signifficantly faster than them, so you're left with lots of time to master a bunch of other skills too, then you'd have to be a bloody genius.

    Now complete geniuses and renaissance personalities like that do exist, but they're rare. We talk in admiration of, say, Leonardo Da Vinci because he's essentially one of a kind. If there were a million Leonardos, you wouldn't have even heard of him.

    If that's your recipe for multi-talent prowess, then it's not exactly practicable for most of the population.
    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
  78. Like I said, it's irrelevant. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since there is no cure, the time is wasted on either:
    - Speaking for it
    - Speaking against it

    Just wait until there is a cure, and let everyone decide for themselves.

    1. Re:Like I said, it's irrelevant. by CptPicard · · Score: 1

      And actually doing something to advance the existence a cure will at least give people the choice faster.

      --
      I want to play Free Market with a drowning Libertarian.
    2. Re:Like I said, it's irrelevant. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now who would be against _that_?

  79. good news by knightdefrost · · Score: 1

    So there is hope for the general american public...

  80. why think cure would dumb down? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why would it not merely increase brain function in areas that aren't working right, adding abilities, not taking any away? Worth a try? Especially with the profound as opposed to high-functional?

  81. Fragile X Syndrome != Autism by Marley · · Score: 1

    This is a treatment for Fragile X Syndrome, in which autism COULD be a result, but not always. You can find a good comparison at the National Fragile X Foundation

    Fragile X has a very defined set of characteristics, mental and physical.

    My brother suffers from Fragile X and I have taken care of him for most of his life. We participated in a study at the UC Davis Mind Institute in which they recently completely a very comprehensive research program into the disorder. It's only within the last 10-15 years they've really understood enough to properly diagnose patients with Fragile X.

  82. Re:Thwart Creativity? Potential Abuse? by sjames · · Score: 1

    It's a VERY tough problem. Autism isn't a simple disability where some function is missing. It's more like a series of functions work differently, some are missing and some seem to be enhanced.

    Some autists do not communicate at all. We don't honestly know if they CAN not or simply CHOOSE not to. That makes it hard to know what goes on in their minds.

    We know that those who do communicate show evidence of things working a bit differently for them.

    All of that and the likely irreversability of the treatment open some real ethical dilemmas. So called neurotypicals expect that they will just naturally want to become "neurotypical", but who is to say.

    The best attempt to empathise is likely a vast oversimplification, but here goes:

    Imagine a pill. If you take it, you will actually understand your manager and why he makes the decisions you do. You will likely be able to get a raise due to your improved understanding (you'll actually "feel" which "magic code words" to say to the boss to get him to agree).

    You'll be able to tell when people are kidding or using figures of speech. You'll have some idea how people are feeling just by looking at them. People will be more interesting. You might enjoy conversations or even parties.

    HOWEVER, your memory of past events will be vastly "de-rezed". You will lose both detail and richness of the experiance though the basic facts will still be there. For example, you may remember what you had for breakfast and even if you liked it or not, but you won't recall the texture of the food or be able to recall the taste in more than an abstract way. You won't remember how many bites you took, how many times you chewed, how many tiles were on the floor, how many people were there, or what page the newspaper was open to.

    Other mental skills will be similarly dulled. You simply won't be able to hold many numbers in your mind at once. Multiplication and division involving large numbers will require a calculator or pencil and paper. Mentally taking a square root (other than simple perfect squares) will be out of the question. You won't know what day a particular date is without a calendar.

    Your senses will be de-rezed and dimmer as well. You won't hear many of the sounds around you any more or notice any details you're not looking right at. Light will seem dimmer. The nuances of a sound will be lost. You won't feel your heart beating unless you concentrate on it (and perhaps not then unless you put your hand on your chest). Different blends of cotton fabric will feel the same to you and you won't smell it unless you put it right up to your nose (if then). You won't feel air currents on your skin unless the wind is blowing.

    Your favorite hobbies might not make any sense any more.

    I could go on but I've probably belabored the point enough. Would you want to take the pill knowing it's irreversable? That seems like a very individual decision and may depend a lot on the degree of social imparement and how much it affects functioning in society. The thing is, it's simply not possible for anyone to really understand what they (or another) would gain or lose by taking the pill. It may even be that taking the pill after the critical formative years would cause mostly losses and few gains.

    I can imagine it might provoke a profound identity crises (to say the least). Some will feel like it opened new doors they didn't even know were there (perhaps even feel lifted from living death), others may feel like it left them half dead and wonder if they should finish the job.

  83. seeing as you're already receptive.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    to naturopathic ideas, just wanted to mention some herbs that ive found useful that you might want to research.

    liquorice (the real plant, not aniseed lollies, has hormonal effect and affects kidneys and can be useful with adrenal problems and low energy levels. particular wrt adrenal crash. may not be appropriate but you should investigate)

    reiishi/lingzi mushroom (an adaptogenic acts on the endocrine system, but i have also personally found immune system balancing effects. once again get knowledgeable assistance)

    there are many other adaptogens, eg astragalis (and of course ginsing), which can be investigated but they are powerful and should be respected and used in an informed responsible manner.

    perilla seed (immune balancing)

    shiitaki mushroom (immune system effects)

    the immune system is definately very complex but one simplification which has explained some of the results people i know have had is the T1 vs T2 dominance theory. Some of these herbs may act to correct such an imbalance or in other ways. definately conduct slow/patient research and investigation.

    denatured milk protein/extract in everything sure does suck. actually high quality organic unhomogenised milk also gives me problems. putting a cheap additive into food like whey is better than wasting food and has got to be better than some other things commonly used (actual synthetic and isolated flavor enhancers, sugar).

    a cynical way of looking at it would be with all the advertising for toxic crap the price of healthy food is greatly reduced because the demand is reduced. good quality olive oil would easily cost several times more than it already does. but miraculously the best quality oil oil sold in supermarkets here in australia (lupi extra virgin) is exactly the same price as crisco and only about 2.5x the cheapest blended canola/soy/palm crap thats probably illegal in the EU. now thats a shame and i would certainly prefer for the supply of olive oil to increase, but which is better. to make healthy food only an option for the rich or to give the informed discerning person access too. without the flood of cheap nasty stuff reducing demand i think prices could easily be 10x higher.

    good luck.

  84. When they chew off their paws or tails. by spineboy · · Score: 1

    I worked at a drug company for a few summers in college (Sandoz - the company were Hoffman discovered LSD). We were testing ergotamine derivatives - looking for some neurologic action (headache/seizure relief).

    During the safety testing, about 80% of the mice in the higher dose group chewed off their tails and paws. The safety data scientists decided to stop trials on that one.. It might have made a good psycho active weapon, like the Scarecrow used in the Batman movies.

    --
    ..........FULL STOP.