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According to Frances Tustin, the core of autism is found in sensory modificationsβand tactile modifications in particular. The sense of touch plays a central role in our experience: it emerges from the start, matures before the distal senses, and constantly connects us with the external environment.
According to Francis Tustin, the lastly mentioned obviousness is challenged in certain cases of autism. Tustin locates the core of autism in modifications of the sense of touch. My exposition is outlined as follows. First, I will examine how touch, in collaboration with the other senses, normally opens into a dimension of depth. Third, I will show how Tustin views autism as a protective reaction to such unthinkable anxieties.
This naturally gives rise to questions on how her theory fits with the more recent findings. That is to say, in comparison with the current autistic spectrum, Tustin is thinking of a more narrow clinical category, covering only levels 2β3 of the ASD.
While the children she has in mind are characteristically mute or echolalic, do not play, seem withdrawn from social interaction, might show little or no signs of awareness of another-persons as such, display bizarre responses and ritualistic behaviors, and need strong support for basic daily activities e. On the other hand, Tustin thinks that most individuals manifest autistic features at least in certain respects and momentarilyβwhat counts for her, phenomenologically speaking, is the scope and permanence of these features e.
At the same time, the idea of a continuum enables the hypothesis that, in focusing on the severe end of the spectrum, one is at once discussing features that figure, to a lesser extent, in the so-called high-functioning autistic persons and neurotypical individuals as well.