InsatiableCuriosity
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You know what they say, the plural of anecdote is not data.
Aaah yes but data believes that .2 of a person is a real number!

You know what they say, the plural of anecdote is not data.
Interesting presumption.
Autism Increase Not Due to Better Diagnosis
and this
Environmental Factor:February 2009:UC Davis Study Examines Rise in Autism Rates
Anecdotes turn into case studies which become the basis of the decision of which (variables/parameters/observables) are gathered to form "data". If you pick the wrong parameter to observe, your data is meaningless.
When observing something as complex as a human with a developmental disorder, mental illness or even a personality typing theory, the initial anecdotes form the foundation. Not many folks are better suited to (people watching/behavioral trend identification) than an ENFP. The error rate will end up fairly high, but an enfp will see things an NT will miss. Their anecdotal observations are (complementary/supplementary/essential) to pure analysis of gathered data.
If you want to cite actual articles (read: real evidence), then that's fine. I was merely speculating that the increase in numbers could be due to an increased ability to diagnose the disorder..
See aboveOriginally, your only evidence to the contrary was your personal experience, and personal experience is subject to a whole slew of personal biases. Your only counter to personal experience being inaccurate was something along the lines of "well I know that my personal experience is not subject to bias." Circular a bit? Yes.....
Again presumption because i have theorizing all through the thread, infact the op poses a question, i have not once anywhere stated i know all the answers. The only thing i am sure of is a rise in cases, theres many many studies that can back that up, Including studies by the NIH who you mentioned yourself. I think that actually it's you who are insinuating you know all the answers when quite obviously you don't.We form hypotheses based off of anecdotes, sure. However, real science does not rely on personal anecdotes for evidence. It relies on repeated, controlled experiments and statistical analysis.
Regardless of how good ENFPs or NTs or anyone is at behavioral trends through people watching, controlled, structured, scientific experiments are still better and thus the only reasonable form of evidence we can use in these kinds of discussions.
It's very difficult to discuss something with someone who is being so presumptious and not reading the full posts.
I did site a link as what you term as real evidence, i sited it just befor i spoke of personal experience as i like to combine the two... check post 10....
Study: Childhood Rise in Autism Cases Real
It used to be the case when my child was first diagnosed (5 years ago)that when we went to the playground (or anywhere out) it seemed that i was the only one around, with few exceptions, with a child with autism. Even in the last several years that amount has dramatically increased, i now see many children with asd, i talk to people and everyone i speak to now knows a child with autism.
I don't believe this is due simply to diagnostic criteria or indeed better awareness, it seems to me there is a boom, becoming ever more frequent.
So at age 15 i was aware of asd and had no other experience what so ever with anyone else with asd for many years. 5 years ago when i was most alert i met very few people with asd but did occaisionally meet parents of children with asd. Now 5 years on when i am not watching all the kids in the playground to see signs i meet them all over the place. This is not due to awareness this is due to a rise in asd cases.
Again presumption because i have theorizing all through the thread, infact the op poses a question, i have not once anywhere stated i know all the answers. The only thing i am sure of is a rise in cases, theres many many studies that can back that up, Including studies by the NIH who you mentioned yourself. I think that actually it's you who are insinuating you know all the answers when quite obviously you don't.
Well now that would just make a huge proportion of all threads null and void.
It can't be natural selection if the it's both true that the autism inducing genes originate with the autistic patients, and that autistic people are less likely to reproduce. Also, does autism pass on to children of autistic people? None of the necessary components for inheritance seem to be involved here.
This is something emergent. Likely a chemical influence of some sort.
Did you read this part of the link in post 10You cited a link that showed evidence that autism cases are increasing, but you never once cited evidence to counter Ivy's and my claims that ASD cases may be rising due to enhanced diagnostic abilities, not an actual increase in people with the disorder. Your initial response to that claim was this::
along with:
I mean seriously, ?!?!???...::
Until post #39, you gave no articles that tackled the issue of enhanced diagnostic capabilities. The article that you are referring to above even stated that they don't know why the numbers are increasing, implying that there is room for a number of different reasons/interpretations.
and check againSo, your original counter to us stating that it's due to enhanced diagnosis was indeed pure anecdote, subject to the biases that come along with your own perception..
Ugh, do i really have to say it...The first real evidence, outside of personal anecdote was not until post 39, which I acknowledged. My main qualm with your argument is that you seemed to think that your narrow personal experience is evidence enough to form an argument regarding a widespread issue. ..
The only thing I have claimed in this thread is that your anecdotal evidence is weak and not very convincing and that science does not work on personal anecdotes. ..
But, You just said thisI have made zero claims about why ASD cases are increasing, and I will be the first to admit that I don't know much about ASD statistics at all; it's just not an issue I'm well-versed in. I have a completely open mind about this thread and the reasons as to why the cases may be increasing, but I'm not about to use one person's personal perception as evidence to help me form my conclusion regarding the issue. ..
but you never once cited evidence to counter Ivy's and my claims that ASD cases may be rising due to enhanced diagnostic abilities, not an actual increase in people with the disorder..
Most people don't cite personal experience as evidence in a scientific issue. When science is concerned, often there are links posted...
I'm really not trying to convince anyone, the idea of this thread was to discuss if there are evolutionary connections with autism.I'm just saying that if you want to do any convincing here and have a solid argument, you shouldn't use the claim that you personally witness it so it must be true on a wider scale....
Anyway, you seem to be getting pretty offended, and that doesn't make too much sense to me, so I'm done.![]()
Yes i did get a little offended it's true, i don't have the cold rationalle many NT's possess. It was all your assumption which hacked me off to be honest, that and the fact you butted into something with a +1 without actually taking in the previous posts.
Oh and the comment regarding the NIH which was really silly considering their own studies (the last two links i posted) state there IS a real rise in rates amoung children which can NOT be due solely to wider diagnostics.
Yes, but I guarantee you that the NIH went about their studies much differently than you and did not rely on personal experience/bias for evidence. :hi:
(clearly you still don't really understand my critique here, if that's one of your counters)
And regarding the things of mine that you've bolded, trying to make me appear contradictory, the key word here is "may." I claimed a possibility, not a personal theory of mine. The possibility that I "claimed" has nothing to do with what I believe, and it was not meant to be an outline of my general stance on this subject. I have remained open to any and all possibilities describing the alleged increase in ASD cases. Nice try though.
^Likewise
The way i see it is your point was that i was basing an argument solely on personal experience. You said over and over again that i did not use a valid link.
My point was that i was using both a valid link and personal experience combined. Check the link, see the facts stop whining.
I live in Finland. But then, Finland is like an old movie.OMG!Where do you live?? That sounds like something out of an old movie! :steam:
This study in 2010 comes to the opposite conclusion
Study: Social influence playing role in surging autism diagnoses | e! Science News
The debate goes on.
Or you could just learn to communicate your ideas effectively.
When your counter has zero links in it, and your whole response is "I think this because I experience this", then it makes your argument to appear as though it is indeed based solely on personal experience.
You do this in post 10 (though it does have a link, the link does not support your stance that it's not due to diagnostic critera). It's a link, and it's valid, but it does not tackle the issue that I'm talking about here: is there really a rise in ASD cases, or is it just due to an enhanced ability to diagnose the disorder?
You also do this in 23. No link, only anecdote.
Until post 39, you did not provide any outside evidence that diagnostic criteria is not the cause for the rise in ASD cases.
And again, I'm really not sure why you are making this personal and telling me to "stop whining." I'm not whining, simply pointing out a fact that your argument was pretty weak until about post 39, as until then, you provided us with zero data that tackled the diagnostic criteria issue; you only provided personal anecdote. Go back and look at your posts if you don't believe me.
We form hypotheses based off of anecdotes, sure. However, real science does not rely on personal anecdotes for evidence. It relies on repeated, controlled experiments and statistical analysis.
Aside from the fact that I really don't agree with the bolded, this alleged skilled area of ENFPs (and lack of skill in NTs) has absolutely nothing to do with how credible GemPOP's assertion was.
Regardless of how good ENFPs or NTs or anyone is at behavioral trends through people watching, controlled, structured, scientific experiments are still better and thus the only reasonable form of evidence we can use in these kinds of discussions.
I found the actual study that that article was based on, it opens with this
"Despite a plethora of studies, we do not know why autism incidence has increased rapidly over the past two decades. Using California data, this study shows that children living very close to a child previously diagnosed with autism are more likely to be diagnosed with autism. An underlying social influence mechanism involving information diffusion drives this result, contributing to 16% of the increase in prevalence over 2000–2005. We eliminate competing explanations (i.e., residential sorting, environmental toxicants, and viral transmission) through seven tests and show that information diffusion simultaneously contributed to the increased prevalence, spatial clustering, and decreasing age of diagnosis."
Also this....
"but what is not really debatable is that the increase in autism incidence is very large"
The actual study is here
University of Chicago Press - Cookie absent
I think everyone agrees that there was an increase in incidence. The questions are: why there was an increase in incidence, in what time frame it happened, and whether or not the increase has stopped.
I frankly can't decide because studies come to different conclusions.
The 2010 sociological study suggests that the increase was due to social awareness of autism.
Also, note the dates they were researching were from 2000-2005. From 2000-2005, there was an increase in incidents, but in 2006, according to the CDC, in the about.com article, there was a decrease.
All I am trying to say, is that the research seems inconclusive at best.