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Autism - Repetitive behaviors and obsessions
Although children with autism usually appear physically
normal and have good muscle control, odd repetitive motions may set them
off from other children. A child might spend hours repeatedly flicking
or flapping her fingers or rocking back and forth. Many flail their arms
or walk on their toes. Some suddenly freeze in position. Experts call
such behaviors stereotypies or self-stimulation.
Some people with autism also tend to repeat certain
actions over and over. A child might spend hours lining up pretzel sticks.
Or, like Alan, run from room to room turning lights on and off.
Some children with autism develop troublesome fixations
with specific objects, which can lead to unhealthy or dangerous behaviors.
For example, one child insists on carrying feces from the bathroom into
her classroom. Other behaviors are simply startling, humorous, or embarrassing
to those around them. One girl, obsessed with digital watches, grabs the
arms of strangers to look at their wrists.
For unexplained reasons, people with autism demand
consistency in their environment. Many insist on eating the same foods,
at the same time, sitting at precisely the same place at the table every
day. They may get furious if a picture is tilted on the wall, or wildly
upset if their toothbrush has been moved even slightly. A minor change
in their routine, like taking a different route to school, may be tremendously
upsetting.
Scientists are exploring several possible explanations
for such repetitive, obsessive behavior. Perhaps the order and sameness
lends some stability in a world of sensory confusion. Perhaps focused
behaviors help them to block out painful stimuli. Yet another theory is
that these behaviors are linked to the senses that work well or poorly.
A child who sniffs everything in sight may be using a stable sense of
smell to explore his environment. Or perhaps the reverse is true: he may
be trying to stimulate a sense that is dim.
Imaginative play, too, is limited by these repetitive
behaviors and obsessions. Most children, as early as age 2, use their
imagination to pretend. They create new uses for an object, perhaps using
a bowl for a hat. Or they pretend to be someone else, like a mother cooking
dinner for her "family" of dolls. In contrast, children with
autism rarely pretend. Rather than rocking a doll or rolling a toy car,
they may simply hold it, smell it, or spin it for hours on end.
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