146
Views
163
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Article

Genetic Influences in Autism

&
Pages 67-80 | Published online: 11 Jul 2009

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (1)

Simon Baron-Cohen. (1999) Can Studies of Autism Teach us About Consciousness of the Physical and the Mental?. Philosophical Explorations 2:3, pages 175-188.
Read now

Articles from other publishers (162)

Fred R. Volkmar. 2021. Encyclopedia of Autism Spectrum Disorders. Encyclopedia of Autism Spectrum Disorders 4033 4036 .
Fred R. Volkmar. 2020. Encyclopedia of Autism Spectrum Disorders. Encyclopedia of Autism Spectrum Disorders 1 3 .
Katherine Crea, Cheryl Dissanayake & Kristelle Hudry. (2016) Proband Mental Health Difficulties and Parental Stress Predict Mental Health in Toddlers at High-Risk for Autism Spectrum Disorders. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 46:10, pages 3242-3257.
Crossref
Geraldine Dawson & Karen Toth. 2015. Developmental Psychopathology. Developmental Psychopathology 317 357 .
Lori M. Baudino. (2010) Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Case of Misdiagnosis. American Journal of Dance Therapy 32:2, pages 113-129.
Crossref
Christine Ecker, Vanessa Rocha-Rego, Patrick Johnston, Janaina Mourao-Miranda, Andre Marquand, Eileen M. Daly, Michael J. Brammer, Clodagh Murphy & Declan G. Murphy. (2010) Investigating the predictive value of whole-brain structural MR scans in autism: A pattern classification approach. NeuroImage 49:1, pages 44-56.
Crossref
R. Caron & I. Bourgeois. (2008) Vers une clinique d’un enfant autiste en classe de maternelle. Annales Médico-psychologiques, revue psychiatrique 166:7, pages 539-546.
Crossref
Luciana G. Tarelho & Francisco B. Assumpção Jr.. (2007) A case of pervasive developmental disorder with chromosomal translocation 1-4. Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria 65:1, pages 153-156.
Crossref
Karen Toth, Geraldine Dawson, Andrew N. Meltzoff, Jessica Greenson & Deborah Fein. (2007) Early Social, Imitation, Play, and Language Abilities of Young Non-Autistic Siblings of Children with Autism. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 37:1, pages 145-157.
Crossref
F. Halberg, G. Cornélissen, J. Panksepp, K. Otsuka & D. Johnson. (2005) Chronomics of autism and suicide. Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy 59, pages S100-S108.
Crossref
John B. Vincent, Georg Melmer, Patrick F. Bolton, Steve Hodgkinson, Debbie Holmes, David Curtis & Hugh M.D. Gurling. (2005) Genetic linkage analysis of the X chromosome in autism, with emphasis on the fragile X region. Psychiatric Genetics 15:2, pages 83-90.
Crossref
Éric Fombonne. 2004. Nouveau traité de psychiatrie de l'enfant et de l'adolescent. Nouveau traité de psychiatrie de l'enfant et de l'adolescent 1171 1185 .
John Morton. 2004. Understanding Developmental Disorders. Understanding Developmental Disorders 273 291 .
Simon Baron-Cohen, Jennifer Richler, Dheraj Bisarya, Nhishanth Gurunathan & Sally Wheelwright. (2003) The systemizing quotient: an investigation of adults with Asperger syndrome or high–functioning autism, and normal sex differences. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences 358:1430, pages 361-374.
Crossref
Chris K. Schutz, Diana Polley, Paula D. Robinson, Maryse Chalifoux, Fabio Macciardi, Bradley N. White & Jeanette J.A. Holden. (2002) Autism and the X chromosome: No linkage to microsatellite loci detected using the affected sibling pair method. American Journal of Medical Genetics 109:1, pages 36-41.
Crossref
Nurit Yirmiya, Michal Shaked & Osnat Erel. 2002. The Research Basis for Autism Intervention. The Research Basis for Autism Intervention 59 73 .
P.A. FilipekP.J. AccardoS. AshwalG.T. BaranekE.H. CookJr.Jr., G. DawsonB. GordonJ.S. GravelC.P. JohnsonR.J. KallenS.E. LevyN.J. MinshewS. OzonoffB.M. PrizantI. RapinS.J. RogersW.L. StoneS.W. TeplinR.F. TuchmanF.R. Volkmar. (2000) Practice parameter: Screening and diagnosis of autism. Neurology 55:4, pages 468-479.
Crossref
Stephen B. Edelson & David Cantor. (2016) The neurotoxic etiology of the autistic spectrum disorders: a replication study. Toxicology and Industrial Health 16:6, pages 239-247.
Crossref
Christopher Gillberg. 2000. Biological Psychiatry. Biological Psychiatry 437 450 .
Susan O'Hanrahan, Michael Fitzgerald & Myra O'Regan. (2014) Personality traits in parents of people with autism. Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine 16:2, pages 59-60.
Crossref
. (1999) Summary of research prepared by Steven Moldin, NIMH. Biological Psychiatry 45:5, pages 573-602.
Crossref
Aviva Fattal‐Valevski, Uri Kramer, Yael Leitner, Yoram Nevo, Yoram Greenstein & Shaul Harel. (2007) Characterization and comparison of autistic subgroups: 10 years' experience with autistic children. Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology 41:1, pages 21-25.
Crossref
Stephen B. Edelson & David S. Cantor. (2017) Autism: Xenobiotic Influences. Toxicology and Industrial Health 14:6, pages 799-811.
Crossref
Stephen B. Edelson & David S. Cantor. (2016) Autism: Xenobiotic Influences. Toxicology and Industrial Health 14:4, pages 553-563.
Crossref
Christopher Gillberg. (2018) Asperger syndrome and high-functioning autism. British Journal of Psychiatry 172:3, pages 200-209.
Crossref
Reed P. Warren. (2014) An Immunologic Theory for the Development of Some Cases of Autism. CNS Spectrums 3:3, pages 71-79.
Crossref
Simon Baron-Cohen. (1998) Does the study of autism justify minimalist innate modularity?. Learning and Individual Differences 10:3, pages 179-191.
Crossref
Christopher Gillberg & Stephan Ehlers. 1998. Asperger Syndrome or High-Functioning Autism?. Asperger Syndrome or High-Functioning Autism? 79 106 .
Simon Baron‐Cohen, Therese Jolliffe, Catherine Mortimore & Mary Robertson. (2006) Another Advanced Test of Theory of Mind: Evidence from Very High Functioning Adults with Autism or Asperger Syndrome. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 38:7, pages 813-822.
Crossref
Simon Baron-Cohen, Sally Wheelwright, Carol Stott, Patrick Bolton & Ian Goodyer. (2016) Is There a Link between Engineering and Autism?. Autism 1:1, pages 101-109.
Crossref
Therese Jolliffe & Simon Baron‐Cohen. (2006) Are People with Autism and Asperger Syndrome Faster Than Normal on the Embedded Figures Test?. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 38:5, pages 527-534.
Crossref
Simon Baron-Cohen, Dare A. Baldwin & Mary Crowson. (1997) Do Children with Autism Use the Speaker's Direction of Gaze Strategy to Crack the Code of Language?. Child Development 68:1, pages 48.
Crossref
PATRICK F. BOLTON, MARGARET MURPHY, HOPE MACDONALD, BETH WHITLOCK, ANDREW PICKLES & MICHAEL RUTTER. (1997) Obstetric Complications in Autism: Consequences or Causes of the Condition?. Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 36:2, pages 272-281.
Crossref
Wendy Woodhouse, Anthony Bailey, Michael Rutter, Patrick Bolton, Gillian Baird & Ann Le Couteur. (2006) Head Circumference in Autism and Other Pervasive Developmental Disorders. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 37:6, pages 665-671.
Crossref
C. Gillberg, V. Nordin & S. Ehlers. (1996) Early detection of autism. Diagnostic instruments for clinicians. European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 5:2, pages 67-74.
Crossref
Viviann Nordin & Christopher Gillberg. (2008) AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDERS IN CHILDREN WITH PHYSICAL OR MENTAL DISABILITY OR BOTH. I: CLINICAL AND EPIDEMIOLOGICAL ASPECTS. Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology 38:4, pages 297-313.
Crossref
Christopher Gillberg & Mary Coleman. (2008) AUTISM AND MEDICAL DISORDERS: A REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE. Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology 38:3, pages 191-202.
Crossref
I. C. Gillberg & C. Gillberg. (2007) Autism in immigrants: a population‐based study from Swedish rural and urban areas. Journal of Intellectual Disability Research 40:1, pages 24-31.
Crossref
Christopher Gillberg. (2016) The psychopharmacology of autism and related disorders. Journal of Psychopharmacology 10:1, pages 54-63.
Crossref
Anthony Bailey, Wendy Phillips & Michael Rutter. (2006) Autism: Towards an Integration of Clinical, Genetic, Neuropsychological, and Neurobiological Perspectives. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 37:1, pages 89-126.
Crossref
Chantal Kemner, Marinus N. Verbaten, Juliane M. Cuperus, Gert Camfferman & Herman van Engeland. (1995) Auditory event-related brain potentials in autistic children and three different control groups. Biological Psychiatry 38:3, pages 150-165.
Crossref
Matthew Hotopf & Patrick Bolton. (1995) A case of autism associated with partial tetrasomy 15. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 25:1, pages 41-49.
Crossref
A. Bailey, A. Le Couteur, I. Gottesman, P. Bolton, E. Simonoff, E. Yuzda & M. Rutter. (2009) Autism as a strongly genetic disorder: evidence from a British twin study. Psychological Medicine 25:1, pages 63-77.
Crossref
D. H. R. Blackwood, W. J. Muir, H. M. Roxborough, M. R. Walker, R. Townshend, M. F. Glabus & S. Wolff. (1994) “Schizoid” personality in childhood: Auditory P300 and eye tracking responses at follow-up in adult life. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 24:4, pages 487-500.
Crossref
P. Bolton, H. Macdonald, A. Pickles, P. Rios, S. Goode, M. Crowson, A. Bailey & M. Rutter. (1994) A Case-Control Family History Study of Autism. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 35:5, pages 877-900.
Crossref
Elizabeth Starr. (1994) Facilitated communication: A response by child protection. Child Abuse & Neglect 18:6, pages 515-527.
Crossref
Donna Spiker, Linda Lotspeich, Helena C. Kraemer, Joachim Hallmayer, William McMahon, P. Brent Petersen, Peter Nicholas, Carmen Pingree, Susan Wiese‐Slater, Carla Chiotti, Dona Lee Wong, Susan Dimicelli, Edward Ritvo, Luigi L. Cavalli‐Sforza & Roland D. Ciaranello. (2005) Genetics of autism: Characteristics of affected and unaffected children from 37 multiplex families. American Journal of Medical Genetics 54:1, pages 27-35.
Crossref
David Lubinski & Travis Thompson. (2010) Animal models: Nature made us, but was the mold broken?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 664-680.
Crossref
G. E. Zuriff. (2010) What's the stimulus?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 664-664.
Crossref
Thomas R. Zentall. (2010) The assessment of intentionality in animals. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 663-663.
Crossref
Nicholas S. Thompson. (2010) Are some mental states public events?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 662-663.
Crossref
I. P. Stolerman. (2010) Cross-fertilization between research on interpersonal communication and drug discrimination. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 661-662.
Crossref
Kurt Salzinger. (2010) How do we know when private events control behavior?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 660-661.
Crossref
S. Plous. (2010) Animal models of human communication. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 660-660.
Crossref
Irene M. Pepperberg. (2010) Communicative acts and drug-induced feelings. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 659-660.
Crossref
Chris Mortensen. (2010) Private states and animal communication. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 658-659.
Crossref
Jay Moore. (2010) Behaviorism, introspection and the mind's I. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 657-658.
Crossref
Chris Moore. (2010) The role of convention in the communication of private events. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 656-657.
Crossref
Robert W. Mitchell. (2010) Pigeons as communicators and thinkers: Mon oncle d'Amerique deux? . Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 655-656.
Crossref
Justin Leiber. (2010) What's biological about the continuity? . Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 654-655.
Crossref
James D. Laird. (2010) We can reliably report psychological states because they are neither internal nor private. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 654-654.
Crossref
Hugh LaFollette & Niall Shanks. (2010) Animal modeling in psychopharmacological contexts. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 653-654.
Crossref
Aarre Laakso. (2010) Pigeons and the problem of other minds. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 652-653.
Crossref
Lloyd G. Humphreys. (2010) Behaviorism is alive and well. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 651-652.
Crossref
Max Hocutt. (2010) Difference without discontinuity. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 651-651.
Crossref
Philip N. Hineline. (2010) A promissory note is paid, but has this bought into an illusion?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 650-651.
Crossref
Valerie Gray Hardcastle. (2010) Communication versus discrimination. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 649-650.
Crossref
Richard Garrett. (2010) A human model for animal behavior. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 648-649.
Crossref
Lawrence H. Davis. (2010) No report; no feeling. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 647-648.
Crossref
E. J. Capaldi & Robert W. Proctor. (2010) Plausible reconstruction? No!. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 646-647.
Crossref
Selmer Bringsjord & Elizabeth Bringsjord. (2010) Animal communication of private states does not illuminate the human case. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 645-646.
Crossref
Marc N. Branch. (2010) The outside route to the inside story. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 644-645.
Crossref
William M. Baum. (2010) The status of private events in behavior analysis. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 644-644.
Crossref
Michael Bamberg. (2010) Communication and internal states: What is their relationship?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 643-644.
Crossref
Donald M. Baer. (2010) Perhaps Sisyphus is the relevant model for animal-language researchers. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 642-643.
Crossref
David Lubinski & Travis Thompson. (2010) Species and individual differences in communication based on private states. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:4, pages 627-642.
Crossref
C. GILLBERG. (2008) Autism and related behaviours. Journal of Intellectual Disability Research 37:4, pages 343-372.
Crossref
A. Bailey, P. Bolton, L. Butler, A. Le Couteur, M. Murphy, S. Scott, T. Webb & M. Rutter. (2006) Prevalence of the Fragile X Anomaly amongst Autistic Twins and Singletons. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 34:5, pages 673-688.
Crossref
John D. McLennan, Catherine Lord & Eric Schopler. (1993) Sex differences in higher functioning people with autism. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 23:2, pages 217-227.
Crossref
A D Cox. (1993) Preventive aspects of child psychiatry.. Archives of Disease in Childhood 68:5, pages 691-701.
Crossref
Gunilla Ahlsén, Lars Rosengren, Margareta Belfrage, Anita Palm, Kenneth Haglid, Anders Hamberger & Christopher Gillberg. (1993) Glial fibrillary acidic protein in the cerebrospinal fluid of children with autism and other neuropsychiatric disorders. Biological Psychiatry 33:10, pages 734-743.
Crossref
Alvin I. Goldman. (2010) Functionalism, the theory-theory and phenomenology. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 101-113.
Crossref
Alison Gopnik. (2010) Theories and illusions. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 90-100.
Crossref
. (2010) Editorial Commentary. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 90-90.
Crossref
Philip David Zelazo & Douglas Frye. (2010) The psychologist's fallacy (and the philosopher's omission). Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 89-90.
Crossref
Deborah Zaitchik & Jerry Samet. (2010) Intentionality, theoreticity and innateness. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 87-89.
Crossref
Andrew Woodfield. (2010) Three questions for Goldman. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 86-87.
Crossref
Max Velmans. (2010) Common sense, functional theories and knowledge of the mind. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 85-86.
Crossref
Michael Tomasello. (2010) Where's the person?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 84-85.
Crossref
Nicholas S. Thompson. (2010) Why Alison Gopnik should be a behaviorist. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 83-84.
Crossref
Kim Sterelny. (2010) Categories, categorisation and development: Introspective knowledge is no threat to functionalism. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 81-83.
Crossref
Keith E. Stanovich. (2010) The developmental history of an illusion. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 80-81.
Crossref
Michael Siegal. (2010) Knowing children's minds. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 79-80.
Crossref
Sydney Shoemaker. (2010) Special access lies down with theory-theory. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 78-79.
Crossref
Barbara A. C. Saunders. (2010) Disenshrining the Cartesian self. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 77-78.
Crossref
James Russell. (2010) On leaving your children wrapped in thought. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 76-77.
Crossref
Lance J. Rips. (2010) Qualities and relations in folk theories of mind. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 75-76.
Crossref
Georges Rey. (2010) Why presume analyses are on-line?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 74-75.
Crossref
Sam S. Rakover. (2010) Theories of mind: Some methodological/conceptual problems and an alternative approach. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 73-74.
Crossref
Howard Rachlin. (2010) Theory-theory theory. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 72-73.
Crossref
Ian Pratt. (2010) Matching and mental-state ascription. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 71-72.
Crossref
David C. Plaut & Annette Karmiloff-Smith. (2010) Representational development and theory-of-mind computations. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 70-71.
Crossref
Bradford H. Pillow. (2010) Limitations on first-person experience: Implications of the “extent”. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 69-69.
Crossref
Paul M. Pietroski. (2010) First-person authority and beliefs as representations. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 67-69.
Crossref
Josef Perner. (2010) A plea for the second functionalist model and the insufficiency of simulation. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 66-67.
Crossref
David R. Olson & Janet Wilde Astington. (2010) The role of concepts in perception and inference. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 65-66.
Crossref
Shaun Nichols. (2010) Developmental evidence and introspection. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 64-65.
Crossref
Adam Morton. (2010) Heuristics and counterfactual self-knowledge. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 63-64.
Crossref
William Edward Morris & Robert C. Richardson. (2010) Mismatching categories?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 62-63.
Crossref
Chris Moore & John Barresi. (2010) Knowledge of the psychological states of self and others is not only theory-laden but also data-driven. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 61-62.
Crossref
Alfred Mele. (2010) Reporting on past psychological states: Beliefs, desires and intentions. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 61-61.
Crossref
Peter Ludlow & Norah Martin. (2010) The fallibility of first-person knowledge of intentionality. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 60-60.
Crossref
Brian Loar. (2010) Functionalism can explain self-ascription. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 58-60.
Crossref
Alexander Levine & Georg Schwarz. (2010) Three inferential temptations. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 57-58.
Crossref
Alan M. Leslie, Tim P. German & Francesca G. Happé. (2010) Even a theory-theory needs information processing: ToMM, an alternative theory-theory of the child's theory of mind. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 56-57.
Crossref
Bernard W. Kobes. (2010) Self-attributions help constitute mental types. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 54-56.
Crossref
Boaz Keysar. (2010) Common sense and adult theory of communication. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 54-54.
Crossref
Brian D. Josephson. (2010) “Good developmental sequence” and the paradoxes of children's skills. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 53-54.
Crossref
Carl N. Johnson. (2010) Gopnik's invention of intentionality. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 52-53.
Crossref
Frank Jackson. (2010) Qualia for propositional attitudes?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 52-52.
Crossref
Terence Horgan. (2010) Analytic functionalism without representational functionalism. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 51-51.
Crossref
Christopher S. Hill. (2010) Qualitative characteristics, type materialism and the circularity of analytic functionalism. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 50-51.
Crossref
John Heil. (2010) Unraveling introspection. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 49-50.
Crossref
Paul L. Harris. (2010) First-person current. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 48-49.
Crossref
Jennifer M. Gurd & John C. Marshall. (2010) Know my own mind? I should be so lucky!. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 47-48.
Crossref
Keith Gunderson. (2010) On behalf of phenomenological parity for the attitudes. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 46-47.
Crossref
Robert M. Gordon. (2010) Self-ascription of belief and desire. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 45-46.
Crossref
Alison Gopnik. (2010) Theories and qualities. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 44-45.
Crossref
Alvin I. Goldman. (2010) Competing accounts of belief-task performance. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 43-44.
Crossref
James H. Fetzer. (2010) Goldman has not defeated folk functionalism. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 42-43.
Crossref
K. Anders Ericsson. (2010) Recall or regeneration of past mental states: Toward an account in terms of cognitive processes. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 41-42.
Crossref
Winand H. Dittrich & Stephen E. G. Lea. (2010) Intentionality, mind and folk psychology. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 39-41.
Crossref
Steven Daniel. (2010) The anthropology of folk psychology. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 38-39.
Crossref
Maria Czyzewska & Pawel Lewicki. (2010) How directly do we know our minds?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 37-38.
Crossref
Nick Chater. (2010) Categorization, theories and folk psychology. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 37-37.
Crossref
Michael Chandler & Jeremy Carpendale. (2010) The naked truth about first-person knowledge. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 36-37.
Crossref
David J. Chalmers. (2010) Self-ascription without qualia: A case study. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 35-36.
Crossref
Kimberly Wright Cassidy. (2010) There's more to mental states than meets the inner “l”. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 34-35.
Crossref
Robert L. Campbell & Mark H. Bickhard. (2010) Knowing levels and the child's understanding of mind. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 33-34.
Crossref
George Butterworth. (2010) Towards an ecology of mind. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 31-32.
Crossref
Karen Bartsch & David Estes. (2010) Are false beliefs representative mental states?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 30-31.
Crossref
Simon Baron-Cohen. (2010) The concept of intentionality: Invented or innate?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 29-30.
Crossref
D. M. Armstrong. (2010) Causes are perceived and introspected. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 29-29.
Crossref
Alvin I. Goldman. (2010) The psychology of folk psychology. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 15-28.
Crossref
Alison Gopnik. (2010) How we know our minds: The illusion of first-person knowledge of intentionality. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages 1-14.
Crossref
. (2010) BBS volume 16 issue 1 Cover and Back matter. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16:1, pages b1-b9.
Crossref
Linda J. Lotspeich & Roland D. Ciaranello. 1993. 87 129 .
B.R. Foorman & J. Leiber. (1993) The eternal context: Affective and cognitive egocentricity and maturation. Linguistics and Education 5:2, pages 165-174.
Crossref
Catherine Lord & Mary J. Ward. 1993. Comprehensive Handbook of Psychopathology. Comprehensive Handbook of Psychopathology 791 814 .
Lars E. Rosengren, Gunilla Ahlsén, Margareta Belfrage, Christopher Gillberg, Kenneth G. Haglid & Anders Hamberger. (1992) A sensitive ELISA for glial fibrillary acidic protein: application in CSF of children. Journal of Neuroscience Methods 44:2-3, pages 113-119.
Crossref
Eric Taylor & Michael Rutter. (2009) The Medical Research Council Unit in Child Psychiatry. Psychological Medicine 22:3, pages 805-813.
Crossref
Christopher L. Gillberg. (2006) The Emanuel Miller Memorial Lecture 1991. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 33:5, pages 813-842.
Crossref
E. Fombonne & C. du Mazaubrun. (1992) Prevalence of infantile autism in four French regions. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology 27:4, pages 203-210.
Crossref
C. GILLBERG. (2008) Subgroups in autism: are there behavioural phenotypes typical of underlying medical conditions?. Journal of Intellectual Disability Research 36:3, pages 201-214.
Crossref
Christopher Gillberg, I Carina Gillberg & Suzanne Steffenburg. (2008) SIBLINGS AND PARENTS OF CHILDREN WITH AUTISM: A CONTROLLED POPULATION‐BASED STUDY. Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology 34:5, pages 389-398.
Crossref
Svenny Kopp & Christopher Gillberg. (1992) Girls with social deficits and learning problems: Autism, atypical Asperger syndrome or a variant of these conditions. European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 1:2, pages 89-99.
Crossref
P. Bolton, A. Pickles, R. Harrington, H. Macdonald & M. Rutter. (2006) Season of Birth: Issues, Approaches and Findings for Autism. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 33:3, pages 509-530.
Crossref
Sula Wolff. (2018) ‘Schizoid’ Personality in Childhood and Adult Life III: The Childhood Picture. British Journal of Psychiatry 159:5, pages 629-635.
Crossref
I. Carina Gillberg. (2008) Autistic Syndrome with Onset at Age 31 Years: Herpes Encephalitis as a Possible Model for Childhood Autism. Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology 33:10, pages 920-924.
Crossref
Uta Frith, John Morton & Alan M. Leslie. (1991) The cognitive basis of a biological disorder: autism. Trends in Neurosciences 14:10, pages 433-438.
Crossref
R. Peter Hobson. (1991) What Is Autism?. Psychiatric Clinics of North America 14:1, pages 1-17.
Crossref
A.J. HOLLAND. 1991. The New Genetics of Mental Illness. The New Genetics of Mental Illness 245 258 .

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.