Point of View: An annotated introductory reading list for neurodiversity

  1. Mirela Zaneva  Is a corresponding author
  2. Tao Coll-Martín
  3. Yseult Héjja-Brichard
  4. Tamara Kalandadze
  5. Andrea Kis
  6. Alicja Koperska
  7. Marie Adrienne Robles Manalili
  8. Adrien Mathy
  9. Christopher J Graham
  10. Anna Hollis
  11. Robert M Ross
  12. Siu Kit Yeung
  13. Veronica Allen
  14. Flavio Azevedo
  15. Emily Friedel
  16. Stephanie Fuller
  17. Vaitsa Giannouli
  18. Biljana Gjoneska
  19. Helena Hartmann
  20. Max Korbmacher
  21. Mahmoud M Elsherif
  22. Alyssa Hillary Zisk
  1. Christ Church College, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
  2. Mind, Brain, and Behavior Research Center (CIMCYC) and the Department of Behavioral Sciences Methodology, University of Granada, Spain
  3. CNRS, France
  4. University of Maryland, Baltimore County, United States
  5. Østfold University College, Norway
  6. Department of Industrial Engineering & Innovation Sciences, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands
  7. Poznan University of Business and Economic, Poland
  8. AGHAM Advocates of Science and Technology for the People, Philippines
  9. ULiège Library and the Center of Semiotic and Rhetoric, University of Liege, Belgium
  10. Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
  11. Queen's University Belfast, United Kingdom
  12. Department of Philosophy, Macquarie University, Australia
  13. Department of Psychology, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
  14. Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, University of Groningen, Netherlands
  15. Department of Interdisciplinary Social Science, University of Utrecht, Netherlands
  16. Centre for Social and Early Emotional Development and School of Psychology, Deakin University, Australia
  17. Ask Me, I'm an AAC user, United States
  18. School of Medicine, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece
  19. Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts, North Macedonia
  20. Department of Neurology, University Hospital Essen, Germany
  21. Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Norway
  22. University of Birmingham, United Kingdom
  23. University of Leicester, United Kingdom
  24. University of Rhode Island, United States

Abstract

Since its inception, the concept of neurodiversity has been defined in a number of different ways, which can cause confusion among those hoping to educate themselves about the topic. Learning about neurodiversity can also be challenging because there is a lack of well-curated, appropriately contextualized information on the topic. To address such barriers, we present an annotated reading list that was developed collaboratively by a neurodiverse group of researchers. The nine themes covered in the reading list are: the history of neurodiversity; ways of thinking about neurodiversity; the importance of lived experience; a neurodiversity paradigm for autism science; beyond deficit views of ADHD; expanding the scope of neurodiversity; anti-ableism; the need for robust theory and methods; and integration with open and participatory work. We hope this resource can support readers in understanding some of the key ideas and topics within neurodiversity, and that it can further orient researchers towards more rigorous, destigmatizing, accessible, and inclusive scientific practices.

Introduction

The neurodiversity paradigm can be seen as a shift in thinking that embraces the diversity of minds, brains, and neurocognition, and affirms variation as natural and valuable (Pellicano and den Houting, 2022; Walker, 2021). Like other paradigm shifts, this change in perspective can be challenging to fully understand in the context of education, research, and social thinking. Here, the issue is further compounded as the term 'neurodiversity' has broad scope. Numerous definitions of neurodiversity as a movement, a research field, and a framework or paradigm exist (Dwyer, 2022; Milton et al., 2020). These three aspects can be distinguished in the following way: (i) the neurodiversity movement encompasses social, advocacy, and political movements advocating for the rights, inclusion, and acceptance of neurodivergent people; (ii) the neurodiversity research field is a largely academic field studying, for instance, psychological and social aspects of neurodiversity; (iii) the neurodiversity paradigm or framework is a conceptual framework that at its core challenges medical or deficit-based views of neurodiversity, and instead asserts that neurocognitive differences should be seen as natural variations (see Table 1). Moreover, these three aspects can overlap and intersect: for instance, research and activism can intersect in areas such as disability rights, mental health advocacy, social justice, and equity, diversity and inclusion efforts in education and in the workforce (Clouder et al., 2020; Dwyer, 2022; Manalili et al., 2023). Unless specifically discussing one of these aspects, here we generally adopt the term 'neurodiversity paradigm' as a broader idea, encompassing ways of thinking applicable to both the neurodiversity movement and the research field.

Table 1
Definitions of key terms.

For further context, discussion and examples of these terms, see Dwyer, 2022 and Walker, 2021.

TermDefinitionFurther notes
Neurodiversity as a paradigm or frameworkA conceptual framework for understanding disability that emphasizes the diversity of neurocognitive, social, behavioural experiences and characteristics.The neurodiversity paradigm challenges deficit-based views of disability by promoting the idea that neurocognitive differences are part of natural human variation, not inherently problematic (Pellicano and den Houting, 2022; Dwyer, 2022).
Neurodiversity as a research fieldA broad area of research that encompasses various topics related to neurodiversity, such as investigating the psychological and social aspects of neurodiversity.The neurodiversity research field can include research on neurodivergent traits across the lifespan, neurodiversity-informed education and workplace practices, among others. For more about neurodiversity approaches for researchers, see Dwyer, 2022.
Neurodiversity as a movementA social and political movement that advocates for the acceptance and inclusion of individuals with neurodivergent differences.The neurodiversity movement seeks to shift public perceptions of neurodivergent people away from seeing them as "disordered" and toward embracing them as part of the diversity of human experiences (Dwyer, 2022).
Neurodiverse peopleA group is considered neurodiverse if its members differ between each other in terms of their neurocognitive functioning.A neurodiverse group of people can include a mix of individuals who are neurodivergent and individuals who are neurotypical (Walker, 2021).
Neurodivergent peopleIndividuals whose neurocognitive functioning diverges from the dominant societal standards of "typical" or "average" functioning. Neurodivergent or neurodivergence may be abbreviated as ND.Neurodivergent people are those whose experiences diverge from what is considered neurologically typical. Asasumasu coined this term with the intention of covering all forms of divergence, including autism, ADHD, epilepsy, cluster headaches, among others (Asasumasu, 2015)
NeurotypeA term used to describe a particular common pattern of neurocognitive functioning.Examples of some named neurotypes include autism, ADHD, dyslexia. See Bottema-Beutel et al., 2021 for more on avoiding ableist language.

Building on this pluralistic perspective, it is important to note that neurodiversity is not limited to cognitive differences, nor to specific named neurotypes (i.e., commonalities in neurological makeup and functioning; Bottema-Beutel et al., 2021), though it does include named neurotypes like autism, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (also known as attention dysregulation hyperactivity development [Dwyer et al., 2024] or variable attention stimulus trait [Hallowell and Ratey, 2022]), and dyslexia, among others. Neurodivergent people typically exhibit neurocognitive variations outside the perceived norm (Walker, 2021). However, defining and interpreting neurodiversity remains complex. On the one hand, neurodiversity is viewed through a theoretical lens as a social ecology of mental functions (Chapman, 2021). On the other hand, researchers compare neurodiversity to biodiversity in nature (Silberman, 2015). Further, people may consider neurodiversity to be a political label, as opposed to a biological label (Chapman, 2021; Ne’eman and Pellicano, 2022) or conversely, a biological impairment as opposed to 'normal' or neurotypical behavior. Nevertheless, both arguments could undermine neurodivergent people, as neurodivergence can thus be seen as a fictitious identity or a condition defined only by limitations, overshadowing the unique traits of individuals. The debate continues to be contentious, and various definitions have been proposed and debated.

In 2015 Kassiane Asasumasu coined the term neurodivergent and defined it as 'neurologically divergent from typical' (Asasumasu, 2015): this definition was broad and inclusive, capturing all such forms of divergence, explicitly noting autism, epilepsy, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), cluster headaches, Chiari malformation, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s, apraxia, cerebral palsy, dyspraxia, various mental health conditions, and neurological differences for which no formal diagnosis has been defined (e.g., aphantasia). Other complementary work has similarly proposed or considered broad views including, for example, dementia (Silberman, 2023), as well as mental health conditions like depression and anxiety (Mellifont, 2019). However, other have insisted that neurodivergence primarily encompasses neurodevelopmental disabilities like autism, dyslexia, and dyspraxia (Walker, 2021) or limit consideration to neurocognitive functions (Shah et al., 2022), even while aware of Asasumasu’s intentions (e.g., Monzel et al., 2023). This lack of consensus, driven by differing theoretical lenses and contexts, underscores the complexity of defining and interpreting neurodivergence within a social construct.

Another challenge for researchers and educators wishing to learn more about neurodiversity, and to implement neurodiversity-affirming practices, is a lack of reliable information about the topic, the presence of misinformation, and the persistence of misunderstandings about neurodiversity (den Houting, 2019). Research studies may employ the rhetoric of the neurodiversity movement without a full understanding of its key assumptions (Neumeier, 2018), perhaps in part due to lack of well-curated accessible resources. Additionally, researchers might mistakenly believe that the neurodiversity movement only applies to neurodivergent people with lower support needs (often referred to as 'high-functioning'), excluding those they consider 'severe', 'profound', 'high support needs' or 'low functioning' as 'too disabled' (Jaarsma and Welin, 2012; note that uncritical use of some of these terms has also been critiqued as ableist within the neurodiversity movement; Bottema-Beutel et al., 2021; Natri et al., 2023). This can result in the exclusion of neurodivergent people from discussions, despite their valuable perspectives (see Silberman, 2023 for an argument on how neurodiversity promotes listening). Such exclusion may stem from the assumption that certain groups lack the capacity for self-advocacy or are not given the opportunities needed to be heard. Alternatively, exclusion can result from a kind of disqualification through presumption of low support needs on the basis that neurodivergent people do not face barriers to make their opinions and needs known (Montgomery, 2005). In some cases, the same people have experienced exclusion or invalidation both for being presumed too disabled and for being presumed not disabled enough (Montgomery, 2001; Baggs, 2005). These challenges, combined with limited awareness of diverse neurodivergent groups and a lack of knowledge on implementation strategies, hinder the necessary identification and adoption of inclusive, robust practices in the behavioural, cognitive, and social sciences, as well as in educational and clinical work.

In order to foster interest in neurodiversity initiatives, as well as promote more robust research in the field, an understanding of key ideas and debates, how they have developed, and current perspectives is needed. To facilitate this, an accessible overview introducing key concepts about neurodiversity is crucial. Such an overview should move the field forward and ensure that neurodiversity is promoted and further develops as a paradigm (e.g., Crüwell et al., 2019; Kathawalla et al., 2021; Kalandadze and Hart, 2024). To this end, we have created an introductory reading list. We developed this list collaboratively amongst a community of neurodivergent and neurotypical researchers, guided both by research expertise and lived experience. We first made an open call for reading recommendations on neurodiversity, targeting thoughtful and impactful literature. The open call was primarily shared through the Framework for Open and Reproducible Research Training (FORRT) platform, an online collaborative community focused on promoting open scholarship, as well as advancing research and education about neurodiversity. Recommendations were welcomed from both academic and non-academic sources, with no exclusion criteria for specific topics or formats. Contributors were asked to explain the strengths of their suggestions, and each recommendation was independently verified by a second researcher. Three of the authors then analysed the papers and categorised them into themes, and the final list of papers and themes was refined through further discussions. The selection process aimed to prioritize materials that were educational, thought-provoking, and broadly relevant (see Methods for more details). In the end we agreed to have nine themes, with two articles for each theme (see appendix 1 for a list of the 18 articles). The articles also vary regarding their own use of language, viewpoints regarding neurodiversity, and positionality (see Box 1).

Box 1

Notes on language and ideas captured in the reading list.

The articles in our reading list are varied in terms of their topics, publication time and cultural context, so they vary regarding their use of language, viewpoints regarding neurodiversity and positionality (see Methods for our own positionality statement). On the whole, we have strived to highlight important and productive ideas about neurodiversity, while rejecting stigmatizing and ableist views.

Our collective social and research understanding of how stigma and ableism work advances over time, so we therefore wish to acknowledge that research standards and views around what constitutes (in)appropriate positionality and language also change. This is especially important in the context of neurodiversity; as neurodiversity is not a 'monolith', different areas of study or social activism have their own current standards. In the present paper, we have leveraged both the research expertise and lived experiences in our team to come to a general agreement about how to highlight important work, while minimizing harm. We have done this both by open general discussion, where all members from the team were welcome to feedback on all papers, at any time, as well as by more targeted reading. Specifically, all highlighted papers were independently read by at least three people (most by five, all of these independent readers were not involved in recommending, double-checking or summarizing the corresponding papers) to ensure that at a broad level, the core ideas were not stigmatizing, ableist, or harmful. Further to this end, for the more widely studied topics within neurodiversity, such as autism and ADHD, we also required that academic papers do not consider autism or ADHD through an exclusive deficit-based view (for instance, treating autism or ADHD as disorders or separating individuals into 'high' or 'low' functioning based on arbitrary statistical cut-offs). We did not impose such restrictions on language for areas of neurodiversity that have been historically understudied, such as Developmental Language Disorder, stuttering or dyspraxia, where we worried that further exclusion of these bodies of work may decrease their recognition as important fields within neurodiversity. Lastly, we acknowledge that despite our quality assurance procedures, it is possible that some of the (hopefully more granular) ideas expressed within the selected papers can still be controversial and debated – for instance, we note in passing, that some papers included brief generalizing statements or phrases that could be negatively charged (e.g., communication impairments instead of communication differences). In this regard, the fact that we have highlighted a certain paper does not mean we agree with all of its ideas or language used. We nevertheless strived to only include papers if their core ideas were, in our joint opinion, not stigmatizing or ableist.

The first six themes – the history of neurodiversity; ways of thinking about neurodiversity; the importance of lived experience; a neurodiversity paradigm for autism science; beyond deficit views of ADHD; and expanding the scope of neurodiversity (by, for example, including dyslexia, dyspraxia, developmental language disorder, and stuttering) – are intended to provide a fundamental understanding of neurodiversity. Rather than being completely discrete and self-contained, these themes often cover related topics, albeit from different perspectives and with different examples. For instance, commonalities emerge regarding the importance of neurodiversity affirming models over deficit-based views, the use of appropriate language, the need to expand definitions of neurodiversity (for instance, to be inclusive of mental health), and the need for inclusion and centring of lived experience. The final three themes – anti-ableism; the need for robust theory and methods; and integration with open and participatory work – are different in that they are oriented towards the future and include actionable steps for future work.

Overall, we hope that this reading list will be a resource that can support readers in obtaining a fundamental and holistic understanding of neurodiversity, and that it will also encourage researchers to apply more rigorous and destigmatizing scientific practices.

Themes

History of neurodiversity

Recommendation 1: Botha M, Chapman R, Giwa Onaiwu M, Kapp SK, Stannard Ashley A, Walker N. 2024. The neurodiversity concept was developed collectively: An overdue correction on the origins of neurodiversity theory. Autism 28:1591–1594.

Recommendation 2: Sinclair J. 1993. Don't mourn for us. Autism Network International: Our Voice Newsletter Issue 3; pages 20–22.

The neurodiversity movement emerged in the 1990s, following the influences of the autistic rights movement and earlier disability rights movements of the 1960s and 70s (Botha et al., 2024; Kapp, 2020). Many have tried to pinpoint the exact moment when the term 'neurodiversity’ emerged. Botha et al. refer to recent archival examinations of extant texts from the 1990s, including forums, community email lists such as Independent Living (autism community), and records of community members and prominent activists of the time, including Tony Langdon in 1996 and Harvey Blume in 1997 and 1998. The authors highlight that many people throughout the 1990s discussed ideas about 'neurological diversity', with the specific term 'neurodivergent' later coined in the 2000s by Kassiane Asasumasu (Asasumasu, 2015). Considering this, Botha et al. argue that the idea of neurodiversity was collectively developed. This corrects a common erasure of neurodivergent people from their own history in misattributing the term singularly to Judy Singer’s first academic use in her 1998 honours thesis and shows the neurodiversity movement has always had a strong community spirit.

For many, neurodivergent communities offer belonging, social connectedness, a way to share experiences and perspectives, and practical support and advice, including empowerment (Botha et al., 2022). Empowerment is essential for wellbeing, self-efficacy, and acceptance, especially for neurodivergent people who face greater risks for isolation, stigmatization, negative stereotyping, and even victimization, with a recent meta-analysis showing that almost half of autistic people had experienced some form of victimization (Trundle et al., 2023). The early autistic self-advocacy movement of the 1990s was acutely aware of these risks faced by autistic and broader neurodivergent communities (for a critique of early behavioural interventions, see Yergeau, 2018). One salient response can be found in Jim Sinclair’s speech 'Don’t Mourn for Us' presented at the 1993 International Conference on Autism in Toronto (Sinclair, 1993). This speech, primarily directed at parents of autistic children, underscores the importance of understanding autism – and indeed neurodiversity – not through a focus on perceived deficits, but by appreciating each person in their own right. These ideas still form part of critical debates around whether and how intervention practices could align with inclusive, participatory, and non-stigmatizing approaches to fostering neurodivergent wellbeing (Leadbitter et al., 2021).

How do we think about neurodiversity?

Recommendation 1: Dwyer P. 2022. The neurodiversity approach(es): What are they and what do they mean for researchers? Human Development 66:73–92.

Recommendation 2: Constantino CD. 2018. What can stutterers learn from the neurodiversity movement? Seminars in Speech and Language 39:382–396.

Collective understandings of neurodiversity have evolved significantly in the last 30 years and it can be challenging to trace back and understand this evolution without context. Two key papers examine the history of neurodiversity and its key ideas (Dwyer, 2022; Constantino, 2018). Both analyze how medical, social, and contemporary models of neurodiversity offer different tangible targets for research. Researchers, activists and laypeople increasingly refer to natural variation in human brains, behavior, and cognition as neurodiversity and consider neurocognitive variants like autism, ADHD, dyslexia, stuttering and others as part of this natural variation rather than only 'disorders' that always need to be 'cured' or 'fixed'. A growing body of socio-environmental research suggests the difficulties neurodivergent people face cannot fully be understood at the individual level, but rather societal barriers and their interactions with personal characteristics, abilities, and circumstances should also be examined. This paves the way for both environmental and societal support, including reasonable adjustments, increased accessibility, anti-discrimination protections, as well as individual-level support (e.g., learning adaptive skills).

Building on these ideas, Dwyer recommends researchers interested in neurodiversity do not exclusively focus on studying perceived weaknesses, but instead balance such research with also studying neurodivergent people’s strengths and how they can be leveraged to help neurodivergent people thrive and achieve their goals.

In a similar light, Constantino argues therapy and interventions should focus on people’s wellbeing rather than perceived 'normalization' of particular behaviours. As an illustrative example, this could mean that when providers offer early interventions to young stutterers, the sole focus need not be placed on fluency but could entail assisting young people with their subjective experience of stuttering, affirming their emotions, and helping improve their wellbeing (Shenker et al., 2023).

The importance of lived experience

Recommendation 1: Johnson RM. 2023. Dyslexia is not a gift, but it is not that simple. Infant and Child Development 32:e2454.

Recommendation 2: van Gorp R. 2022. My journey and the value of a community where neurodiversity is celebrated. Scope Contemporary Research Topics: Learning and Teaching 11:42–49.

The neurodiversity movement, with its focus on advocating for neurodivergent people, serves as a framework through which advocates, practitioners, and researchers challenge traditional assumptions about neurodivergent experiences. Prior to the emergence of neurodiversity as a paradigm, the dominant approach – rooted in biomedical psychiatry – categorized individuals into 'mentally disordered' subgroups based on their symptoms (Chapman, 2021; Hunt and Procyshyn, 2024). This medical model has been critiqued as dismissive of people’s experiences, by treating them as unreliable (and individual/anecdotal), and perhaps even limiting people’s opportunities to independently understand their own thoughts, feelings, and behaviours (Cutler, 2019; Petty and Ellis, 2024). In the context of neurodiversity literature, lived experiences refer to the unique and subjective perceptions, narratives, and encounters of those who identify as neurodivergent. These accounts provide valuable insights into the day-to-day realities, triumphs, and challenges of neurodivergent minds (see Kidd, 2018 on traumatic brain injury). Through shared experiences, neurodivergent communities might gain empowerment, validation, improved self-efficacy and wellbeing, as well as increased social support, connectedness, and reduced feelings of isolation (Watts et al., 2024; see also Milton et al., 2020 for wider discussion of the value of lived experience).

Lived experiences also benefit researchers studying neurodivergent people. For example, Johnson argues that valuing these experiences is crucial for gaining a nuanced understanding of dyslexic perspectives. Researchers should actively seek partnerships with dyslexic people to incorporate their feedback and centre their voices within dyslexia research. Furthermore, neurodivergent researchers themselves can contribute by sharing their personal experiences. Doing so will not only reduce stigma, it will also spread knowledge about coping mechanisms and tools and illuminate the intersections of neurodivergent experiences and professional careers.

van Gorp shares her journey navigating educational spaces over time, both as a neurodivergent student and lecturer (van Gorp, 2022). She details her experiences with being diagnosed with Irlen syndrome and dyslexia, as well as her decision to disclose her diagnosis at a Neurodiversity Symposium, and the subsequent empowerment and community support she felt. Indeed, both van Gorp and Johnson emphasize that sharing lived experiences fosters empowerment, inclusion, and compassion, ultimately enriching our collective understanding of neurodiversity.

A neurodiversity paradigm for autism science

Recommendation 1: Pellicano E, den Houting J. 2022. Annual Research Review: Shifting from ‘normal science’ to neurodiversity in autism science. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. 63:381–396.

Recommendation 2: Botha M, Hanlon J, Williams GL. 2023. Does language matter? Identity-first versus person-first language use in autism research: A response to Vivanti. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 53:870–878.

The field of autism research has a long history predating the neurodiversity movement, and consequently, both scientific and social understandings of autism have developed over time (Kapp, 2020). The two papers highlighted here poignantly argue for the need to move towards a neurodiversity paradigm for autism science (Pellicano and den Houting, 2022), and engage more deeply with considerations around language use, particularly by centring the needs, autonomy and rights of autistic people (Botha et al., 2023).

In their review article, Pellicano and den Houting acknowledge that the conventional medical approach has advanced our understanding of autism, but they also argue that this approach has been challenged due to the rise in autistic self-advocacy, the neurodiversity movement, and the relative absence of non-deficit based explanations regarding what autism is. The authors focus on big-picture ideas related to the neurodiversity paradigm and its vital application to autism science: (i) focusing on relational contexts, systemic contexts, and the interaction between contextual and individual factors rather than attributing all difficulties for all parties to deficits within one (autistic) party; (ii) supporting autistic contributions to autism research, including through support for autistic researchers, collaborations involving autistic people (both lay community members and researchers), and the development of more robust participatory mechanisms for co-design and co-production; and (iii) focusing on autistic community priorities, ensuring research-generated knowledge is translated into real-world applications targeting the challenges autistic people face.

Botha, Hanlon and Williams discuss the use of language in autism research, focusing on the priorities of the autistic community. Their work offers a rich treatment of the differences between person-first language and identity-first language, while acknowledging that there is currently no clear majority consensus among autistic people in terms of preferred language; there is a need to replicate and expand previous survey efforts. Crucially, they argue that language use is highly important, with tangible consequences including stigmatization and dehumanization. With this in mind, research and practice should centre the needs and experiences of autistic people.

Beyond deficit views of ADHD

Recommendation 1: Sonuga-Barke EJ. 2023. Paradigm 'flipping' to reinvigorate translational science: Outlining a neurodevelopmental science framework from a 'neurodiversity' perspective. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 64:1405–1408.

Recommendation 2: Tamir T. (2023). Being Neurodivergent in Academia: Working with my brain and not against it eLife 12:e95068.

ADHD is increasingly being explored via a neurodiversity lens through works that have two aims: (i) to provide a rich understanding of ADHD; (ii) to reshape practical applications in everyday and professional environments. One such example is an opinion article in which Sonuga-Barke critiques the traditional biomedical model that has long dominated ADHD research and therapy, proposing instead a neurodiversity-affirming model (Sonuga-Barke, 2023). In particular, it introduces an innovative intervention program that can be implemented by neurodivergent researchers. In addition to challenging existing ways of thinking, this new approach also actively involves neurodivergent people in the creation and execution of research, thereby ensuring that the interventions are genuinely reflective of and responsive to the needs of those with ADHD.

Another compelling exploration of ADHD is presented by Tamir. The article highlights the personal journey of an academic who initially received a diagnosis of depression during their PhD studies (Tamir, 2023). Years later, an ADHD diagnosis clarified the root of their ongoing struggles with mental health, spurred in part by the high demands of academia. This narrative underscores the often-misunderstood manifestations of ADHD, such as hyperfocus and impulsivity, which, while sometimes beneficial in a research setting, frequently lead to burnout. In addition to sharing a personal story, the author also discusses strategies that can be adapted to harness ADHD traits beneficially.

Both articles advocate for a shift away from viewing ADHD through a deficit lens to recognizing it as part of the broader spectrum of human neurocognitive diversity. They call for educational and professional systems that do not merely accommodate but actively embrace and adapt to neurodivergent ways of thinking and learning, promoting a more inclusive environment.

Expanding the scope of neurodiversity: diverse neurotypes and experiences

Recommendation 1: Green AE, Alyssa, Durá L, Harris P, Heilig L, Kirby B, McClintick J, Pfender E, Carrasco R. 2020. Teaching and researching with a mental health diagnosis: Practices and perspectives on academic ableism. Rhetoric of Health & Medicine 3: Issue 2; article 1.

Recommendation 2: Elsherif MM, Wheeldon LR, Frisson S. 2021. Do dyslexia and stuttering share a processing deficit? Journal of Fluency Disorders 67:105827.

Historically, neurodiversity work has focused on autism and ADHD, though our understanding of neurodiversity is broader (Asasumasu, 2015) and includes mental health and language-based disabilities, which we highlight here to showcase the diversity of neurodivergences and experiences. Green et al. explored the experiences of nine people who navigate their mental health diagnoses within academia (Green et al., 2020). Through a dialogue format they discuss various challenges, including around getting a diagnosis, decisions regarding disclosure, managing the limitations and affordances of their disabilities, seeking reasonable adjustments, and advocating for themselves. They also argue that while disability laws in their country acknowledge these needs, those with mental disabilities are still seeking access to education, care, appropriate accommodations, among others. Their work highlights the need to improve inclusivity by promoting conversations about mental health within academic environments.

Elsherif, Wheeldon and Frisson assessed the potential language processing link between dyslexia and stuttering through a prevalence study in a British sample of 164 adults (Elsherif et al., 2021). They found that 43% of dyslexics stuttered during childhood, and 50% of stutterers were identified as dyslexic. Considering their use of medical model language (e.g., deficit), we can reframe their findings through a neurodiversity-affirming lens: (i) they provide evidence that dyslexia and stuttering co-occur; (ii) they carve paths so future research can rigorously investigate whether dyslexia and stuttering have similar phonological profiles; (iii) their findings may help dyslexics and stutterers be better understood and supported within academia and society. Such reframings align with the push for inclusivity in research concerning dyslexia, stuttering (Constantino, 2018; Taylor et al., 2023), and the broader field of speech/language pathology (Manalili, 2022). We also caution against oversimplification when studying neurodiversity. Dyslexia, stuttering, and other forms of neurodivergence need not be seen as 'gifts' to be valued; as others have argued, even 'positive' stereotypes could be harmful (Odegard and Dye, 2024). Instead, it is important to recognize various forms of neurodivergence inherently as variations that contribute to the richness of neurodiversity (Johnson, 2023).

Anti-ableism

Recommendation 1: Natri HM, Abubakare O, Asasumasu K, Basargekar A, Beaud F, Botha M, Bottema-Beutel K, Brea MR, Brown LXZ, Burr DA, et al. 2023. Anti-ableist language is fully compatible with high-quality autism research: Response to Singer et al.(2023). Autism Research 16:673–676.

Recommendation 2: Hamilton LG, Petty S. 2023. Compassionate pedagogy for neurodiversity in higher education: A conceptual analysis. Frontiers in Psychology 14:1093290.

Anti-ableism and anti-ableist language go far beyond the framework of neurodiversity. Anti-ableism is part of the broader disability rights movement, a social movement against discrimination and bias toward disabled people. Specific forms of ableism include psychophobia or sanism, referring to discrimination against people with mental health problems and who, as a result, are 'psychiatrized' (i.e., caught in the medical world and sometimes locked in psychiatric institutions; Chamberlin, 1978). Language can play a role in shaping perceptions and attitudes towards people with disabilities, including those with mental disabilities or other forms of neurodivergence. Many studies on neurodivergence are conducted within an exclusively medical and psychiatric framework, which can sometimes reflect biases (Bottema-Beutel et al., 2023). These studies are often carried out by neurotypical researchers, which may inadvertently influence the way neurodivergent individuals are represented. This highlights the importance of adopting more inclusive practices in research, particularly when it comes to language.

However, recommendations for more inclusive and neutral language can often be controversial. While some have argued that more neutral language would hinder scientifically precise descriptions (Singer et al., 2023), those promoting anti-ableist language argue ableist terminology is often both irrelevant and pejorative. For example, Natri et al. propose using 'likelihood' instead of 'risk', and 'co-occurring' instead of 'comorbidity'. Similarly, the terms 'profound autism', 'severe' or 'challenging behavior' can be dehumanizing. Moreover, they are often vague and overly simplistic, as they tend to imply clear-cut divisions on a linear scale of severity (e.g., between ‘low’ and ‘high functioning’). Such terms may also ignore or minimize other important dimensions of a person’s experience, including their full range of abilities, interests and needs, as well as how these vary across different contexts (Zisk, 2019).

While ableism can be reflected in language, it is not limited to linguistic expression alone, and so anti-ableism efforts should extend beyond language. In the context of anti-ableism in education, Hamilton and Petty propose establishing a compassionate educational paradigm that emphasizes empathy, inclusiveness, and care (Hamilton and Petty, 2023). The goals of such efforts are to provide more flexibility in how students access course content and demonstrate their learning, as well as to encourage neurodivergent students to build positive schemas for themselves in an educational context.

The need for robust theory and methods

Recommendation 1: Gernsbacher MA, Yergeau M. 2019. Empirical failures of the claim that autistic people lack a theory of mind. Archives of Scientific Psychology 7:102.

Recommendation 2: Cheng Y, Tekola B, Balasubramanian A, Crane L, Leadbitter K. 2023. Neurodiversity and community-led rights-based movements: Barriers and opportunities for global research partnerships. Autism 27:573–577.

To advance the scientific study of neurodiversity, robust theory and methods are essential. We highlight two papers with useful insights regarding how such efforts can be advanced. Gernsbacher and Yergeau critique a large body of work that erroneously claimed that autistic people lack theory of mind, ultimately finding that the evidence base is 'empirically questionable and societally harmful'. They do this by pointing out failures in the literature regarding specificity, universality, replication, convergent validity, and predictive validity – thus also offering benchmarks of standards that future research should meet. Gernsbacher and Yergeau offer many examples of specific research tasks that were either inappropriate to test for theory of mind, too 'narrow' in focus, or lacking in convergence between each other (e.g., tasks whose results do not correlate). Overall, these papers powerfully illustrate how poor research practices can perpetuate harmful stereotypes and how critical engagement with more rigorous and robust research standards can help to address these problems.

Further important aspects for developing robust methods for studying neurodiversity include asking useful research questions with relevance to neurodivergent people’s lives and needs (see next theme), questioning who gets to be included in conversations and work on neurodiversity, and understanding neurodiversity as a global, rather than solely western area of research and activism. Historically, the neurodiversity movement has been driven largely by English-speaking White autistic people, primarily from countries in the Global North, and it is necessary to recognize the issue of intersectionality in terms of those whose voices have been included in neurodiversity activism and scholarship and those whose voices have been excluded (for instance, on the need for greater racial diversity in autism research, see Giwa Onaiwu, 2020). Indeed, as some have warned, solidifying the homogenization of neurodiversity as a White and western movement could undermine the social justice and emancipatory goals of the movement (Nair et al., 2024).

Drawing on their collective experiences in Ethiopia, India, and Hong Kong, Cheng et al. can help readers think critically about the issues of intersectionality and inclusion by discussing a variety of sociocultural and political conditions specific to Asian and African neurodiversity efforts (Cheng et al., 2023). Cheng et al. argue that the neurodiversity movement shares fundamental goals with decolonization agendas such as dismantling what, at times, to some may have seemed as 'objective' scientific efforts that ultimately disparage the truths, knowledge, and priorities of lived experiences (e.g., claims that autistic people lack theory of mind). In this light, decolonizing knowledge production, respecting local theoretical frameworks, indigenous knowledge, and fostering community-led science could be important tools for a more robust study of neurodiversity that does not dehumanize neurodivergent people.

Integration with open and participatory work

Recommendation 1: Gourdon-Kanhukamwe A, Kalandadze T, Yeung SK, Azevedo F, Iley B, Phan JM, Ramji AV, Shaw JJ, Zaneva M, Dokovova M, Hartmann H, Kapp S, Warrington K, FORTT, Elsherif M. 2023. Opening up understanding of neurodiversity: A call for applying participatory and open scholarship practices. The Cognitive Psychology Bulletin 8:23–27.

Recommendation 2: Heraty S, Lautarescu A, Belton D, Boyle A, Cirrincione P, Doherty M, Douglas S, Plas JRD, Van Den Bosch K, Violland P, Tercon J, Ruigrok A, Murphy DGM, Bourgeron T, Chatham C, Loth E, Oakley B, McAlonan GM, Charman T, Puts N, Gallagher L, Jones EJH. 2023. Bridge-building between communities: Imagining the future of biomedical autism research. Cell 186:3747–3752.

From its inception, the neurodiversity movement has advanced through collective action and conversation (see 'History of neurodiversity' above). Gourdon-Kanhukamwe et al. consider the power of inclusive collective work as important as ever, with concrete opportunities to catalyse and inspire such efforts within the frameworks of participatory and open scholarship. Large 'big team science' initiatives within the open scholarship movement, such as ABRIR (Advancing Big-team Reproducible science through Increased Representation) and FORRT, have successfully enabled a variety of projects designed by more diverse communities of researchers. The Team Neurodiversity initiative within FORRT, for example, maintains a Database of Neurodivergent Researchers and has provided support for a number of projects on participatory research and open scholarship (Elsherif et al., 2022; Gourdon-Kanhukamwe et al., 2023; Phan et al., 2025). Other groups, such as the Feminist WonderLab (Hartmann et al., 2024) or newly emerging NeurodiversiTea journal clubs, strive to make academia a better place for underrepresented people.

To foster productive participatory work with mutual trust and without tokenism, Heraty et al. argue that it is important to have purposeful involvement at all stages of the research process, including selecting research questions, designing studies and protocols, and interpreting and disseminating findings (Heraty et al., 2023).

Both Heraty et al. and Gourdon-Kanhukamwe et al. highlight many of the benefits of involving neurodivergent people in co-production and mutuality practices of research, including the promotion of wider epistemic justice, equality in knowledge production, greater relevance of research to lived experience, and greater translational potential of research findings.

Further readings

We hope the themes discussed here spark an interest in neurodiversity. The current list of themes is not intended as a canonical or definitive organization, and is only one of many possible ways to learn more about neurodiversity. As such, we want to offer suggestions for further key readings, as well as other potential themes or topics of interest. Readers interested in extended introductions about the neurodiversity paradigm, movement, and research field, may wish to consider The Neurodiversity Reader (Milton et al., 2020). Detailed accounts about the autistic community, its early development, and key figures should consult the book Autistic Community and the Neurodiversity Movement: Stories from the Frontline (Kapp, 2020). For deeper theoretical engagement with neurodiversity, as well as critiques to medicalized views and harmful societal viewpoints, please see the books Neuroqueer Heresies (Walker, 2021) and Authoring Autism: On Rhetoric and Neurological Queerness (Yergeau, 2018).

It is important to recognize the plurality of important topics in neurodiversity and the inherent subjectivity in thematic categorization. For instance, many of the papers we synthesized here could have been thematically organized in different ways, such as focusing more on: the evolution of the neurodiversity paradigm over time; different global and cultural perspectives on neurodiversity; the importance of intersectionality in shaping neurodivergent experiences; better understanding stigma, ableism, and language; charting neurodiversity across the lifespan; and understanding how lived experience can both drive academic research and theory and also be a theoretical contribution. Indeed, as online forums and discussions show, the term neurodiversity was collectively developed (Botha et al., 2024; see also 'History of neurodiversity' above). This is only one of many examples of the power of community discussion and community theorizing, and the importance of meaningful engagement with community work (Zisk, 2024). With this in mind, we also wish to encourage interested readers to consider blogs. As one example, we recommend Autistic Scholar by Patrick Dwyer, a blog with rich discussions informed by both academic research and lived experience on contemporary topics such as the double empathy problem (Dwyer, 2024). Blogs can also chart the evolution and spread of ideas, such as an important discussion by Mel Baggs on the history and importance of the concept of neurodivergent 'cousins' (that is, people who share common communication patterns or social characteristics without necessarily sharing the same neurotype; Baggs, 2016). We also direct interested readers to a reading list on critical autism studies beyond academia complied by one of the present authors (Zisk, 2023).

Conclusion

This paper aims to serve as an accessible resource for researchers, educators and students to better understand neurodiversity and to support neurodivergent people. It is important to develop neurodiversity, both as a paradigm and social movement, and in rigorous and inclusive ways. Past research, carried out with poor theoretical and methodological approaches, has likely reinforced harmful stereotypes (e.g., erroneous claims that autistic people lack theory of mind; Gernsbacher and Yergeau, 2019). The eradication of such harmful stereotyping and discrimination will remain challenging as long as existing barriers, including a lack of awareness and knowledge about neurodiversity and its heterogeneity, persist. To address these challenges, we have curated and presented different key papers that contribute and advance our understanding of neurodiversity. We hope researchers, educators, scholars, activists and neurodiversity allies build on this effort and further promote a positive and productive neurodiversity field.

This reading list focused not only on what neurodiversity is or has been historically (e.g., medical classifications of disorders), but what it can be. We envision a future where everyone is welcomed, valued, and listened to, where weaknesses are acknowledged without pathologization, and strengths are celebrated, leading to continual improvement and positive growth.

Methods

In August 2023, we published an open call for contributions via the Framework for Open and Reproducible Research Training (FORRT) community channels and personal contacts (available on OSF: https://osf.io/c98sk/). We believe FORRT reaches a fairly diverse audience of people working in and outside of academia, interested in open scholarship and neurodiversity. Some of our collaborators were already involved in other FORRT projects, whereas others were familiar with FORRT but not involved in this community; some collaborators also joined after hearing about our open call from their own networks. At a broad level, our approach entailed collecting reading recommendations and then double-checking and categorizing all recommended materials.

We were interested in finding thoughtful and robust literature that could provoke discussion, reflection and interest in the field of neurodiversity. We asked people suggesting materials to prioritize articles they were particularly impressed by, that had changed or challenged their thinking, or considered to be fundamental contributions to the field. We did not apply any exclusion criteria regarding the specific field, topic, research method, design, or population studied. We welcomed both empirical (e.g., original research) and theoretical (e.g., position statements) pieces of work. We anticipated that the majority of articles included would be peer-reviewed manuscripts. This was not a formal inclusion criterion, as discussions on neurodiversity also originate outside the academic sphere and continue to be a vibrant topic of conversation beyond formal research settings (Zisk, 2023). We aimed to be as inclusive as possible in order to not miss any potentially relevant content (e.g., working papers, viewpoints, newspaper articles, blogs, manifestos, letters and correspondence). This was done with the particular consideration that position statements, co-produced work, or work with embedded mutuality practices may not always be presented in 'traditional' academic formats.

Contributors who submitted reading materials for consideration for the annotated reading list were asked to provide an explanation for their suggestions, describing the strengths or contributions of the specific papers or materials they recommended. People could suggest work that they authored or contributed to. However, to reduce conflict of interest and bias, authors were required to disclose this information. Each paper suggestion was double-checked by a second, independent researcher, who verified citations, content explanations, and optionally provided further comments or personal reflection about the importance of the proposed reading material.

Three of us (MZ, MME, AZ) then examined all papers, as well as the reasons for recommendations, and any comments, and provided a first thematic categorization of all papers. This categorization was discussed with the entire team. After feedback and discussion with all collaborators, the themes were finalized. Then, we discussed as a group which two papers to highlight per theme. Given the existing varying research specialties in our groups, team members who had research expertise, lived experience, and/or interests relevant to each theme volunteered to finalize the selection of papers and draft a statement of the importance of the reading materials for the corresponding theme. We had on average 2–3 volunteers who worked on drafting each theme directly. For each theme, we recommended that 1–2 papers are highlighted but instructed volunteers that they could select more. We originally suggested 1–2 papers as a guiding number, bearing in mind that other annotated reading lists have typically highlighted and annotated one key topic per theme (e.g., Kalandadze and Hart, 2024; Crüwell et al., 2019). We also worried that selecting many more papers per theme could lead to a potentially overwhelming reading list for readers.

Overall, we prioritized papers that we, as a group, considered were fundamentally important, educational, and thought-provoking. We considered papers to have high educational value if they (for example) provided clear overviews of a given topic, if they covered a debate or traced a given idea or concept’s historical origin comprehensively and with appropriate context. In order to consider texts as educational, we took into account how accessible they were for readers, especially potential newcomers to neurodiversity. With this in mind, we wanted texts to be intelligible to a wider audience and not exclusively geared to experts. We were still inclusive of texts with some degree of jargon or specific terminology as long as on the whole, the core messages were clear, and texts were informative. Regarding the importance of texts, we looked out for work that made a clear contribution with relevance to neurodiversity (as a paradigm, a research field, or a social movement). Given the variety of types of texts and topics, importance could relate to different aspects, such as changing discourse, clarifying a concept, challenging a widely held belief, offering a novel perspective, etc. We did not require papers to be scored numerically against a specific rubric or scale (e.g., for importance) but instead used these broad guiding principles (see Appendix 1). Although such criteria can be subjective, we hope that the plurality of research interests and lived experiences in our group have minimized potential individual level biases. Interested readers can find short summaries and comments on the importance of the papers on our OSF page (https://osf.io/c98sk/) in the reading list and double checking excel sheet forms.

For the purposes of this annotated reading list, we collected and double-checked 54 items. We categorized a final selection of 18 papers, chosen based on their subjective importance, covering nine themes: history of neurodiversity; how do we think about neurodiversity?; the importance of lived experience; a neurodiversity paradigm for autism; beyond deficit views of ADHD; expanding the scope of neurodiversity; anti-ableism; the need for robust methods; and integration with open and participatory work.

Positionality

We are a diverse group of both neurodivergent and neurotypical researchers, working in and outside of academia in different countries around the world and at different career stages. We are united by our shared interest in neurodiversity on personal and/or scientific levels. Most of our team members form part of the FORRT community. This is an open group for all, where we strive to promote open scholarship, as well as values of social justice, diversity, inclusion, belongingness and equity. The current manuscript was written as a joint, collaborative work, where anyone interested in contributing could do so. The core criteria for authorship entailed suggesting at least two items and checking at least two items. Additional tasks such as theme and paper selection, drafting, editing, analysis, and administrative support contributed to author order, and in a small number of cases substituted for material suggestions and/or checking. This led to five groups of authors of varying size, with equal contributions within each group.

As we come from different academic, professional, educational, and personal backgrounds, and similarly have different degrees of privilege, different abilities and skills in different domains, we hold different views on what constitutes 'neurodiversity' and how it or its different facets should be most appropriately described and positioned. We view this plurality and divergence of viewpoints as positive and productive, allowing a greater inclusion and consideration of varying perspectives. Our core aim with this annotated list is not to be prescriptive about neurodiversity, but rather to introduce readers to important views on critical topics in the field, such as key historical and current trends, as well as open discussion about how to strengthen the field.

Appendix 1

Short, non-exhaustive summaries of significant contributions by the articles in our reading list.

TextContributions
History of neurodiversity
Botha M, Chapman R, Giwa Onaiwu M, Kapp SK, Stannard Ashley A, Walker N. 2024. The neurodiversity concept was developed collectively: An overdue correction on the origins of neurodiversity theory. Autism 28:1591–1594.Letter authored by an international group of autistic scholars, powerful collaborative work
Corrects erroneous beliefs about the origins of the concept of neurodiversity
Highlights the power of community discussions and community theorising
Sinclair J. 1993. Don't mourn for us. Autism Network International: Our Voice Newsletter Issue 3; pages 20–22.Challenges deficit-based models of autism, argues that autism isn’t a tragedy
Advocates for acceptance, particularly from parents and society
Encourages a reframing of the parent-child relationship, and building a positive relationship with one’s child, embracing who they are as an individual
How do we think about neurodiversity?
Dwyer P. 2022. The neurodiversity approach(es): What are they and what do they mean for researchers? Human Development 66:73–92.Clear definitions of key terms in neurodiversity
Different approaches are well situated and intelligible for broad audience
Implications for developmental psychology are presented
Constantino CD. 2018. What can stutterers learn from the neurodiversity movement? Seminars in Speech and Language 39:382–396.Neurodiversity has placed a large focus on autism and ADHD, so this is an especially important perspective on how the neurodiversity movement can benefit stutterers
Clear communication on how therapy objectives can correspond to people’s lives
Focus on mental health and wellbeing as goals
The importance of lived experience
Johnson RM. 2023. Dyslexia is not a gift, but it is not that simple. Infant and Child Development 32:e2454.An important perspective on dyslexia, including a survey of different conceptualizations of dyslexia
Well contextualized discussion on the 'dyslexia gift' debate
Places importance on research partnership and collaboration
van Gorp R. 2022. My journey and the value of a community where neurodiversity is celebrated. Scope Contemporary Research Topics: Learning and Teaching 11:42–49.Powerful lived experience report (Irlen Syndrome and dyslexia)
Discusses issues around deciding to disclose being neurodivergent
Argues for and illustrates benefits of community participation
A neurodiversity paradigm for autism science
Pellicano E, den Houting J. 2022. Annual Research Review: Shifting from ‘normal science’ to neurodiversity in autism science. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 63:381–396.Powerful argument for embracing a neurodiversity perspective in autism science
High educational value, providing clear overview of conventional medical paradigm and critiques of it
Well-presented definitions and core perspectives from the neurodiversity paradigm
Botha M, Hanlon J, Williams GL. 2023. Does language matter? Identity-first versus person-first language use in autism research: A response to Vivanti. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 53:870–878.Strong arguments presented regarding how language use has important consequences for neurodivergent people, specifically for autistic people
Valuable educational resources, discusses differences between identity-first and person-first language use with clear examples
Clear illustrations of pitfall of superficial engagement with autistic scholarship
Beyond deficit views of ADHD
Sonuga-Barke EJ. 2023. Paradigm 'flipping' to reinvigorate translational science: Outlining a neurodevelopmental science framework from a 'neurodiversity' perspective. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 64:1405–1408.Challenges deficit-based view in neurodevelopmental fields of autism and ADHD
Encourages participation of neurodivergent people in the full scientific process
Offers concrete examples of participatory practices
Tamir T. 2023. Being Neurodivergent in Academia: Working with my brain and not against it. eLife 12:e95068.A powerful self-report of a neurodivergent person’s lived experiences in navigating their academic and personal life
An informative and personal account of coping-strategies
Offers intersectional lens, particularly regarding mental health and cultural background
Expanding the scope of neurodiversity: diverse neurotypes and experiences
Green A. et al. 2020. Teaching and researching with a mental health diagnosis: Practices and perspectives on academic ableism. Rhetoric of Health & Medicine 3: Issue 2, article 1.Informative piece addressing the overlap between neurodiversity and mental health
Highlights diagnoses that are not typically considered in neurodiversity (e.g., bipolar and personality disorders)
Discusses realities and impacts of academic ableism
Elsherif MM, Wheeldon LR, Frisson S. 2021. Do dyslexia and stuttering share a processing deficit? Journal of Fluency Disorders 67:105827.Focuses on an important, understudied topic within neurodiversity
Challenges previous research which had ignored the co-occurrence between dyslexia and stuttering
Shows commonalities between dyslexia and stuttering
Anti-ableism
Natri HM, et al. 2023. Anti-ableist language is fully compatible with high-quality autism research: Response to Singer et al.(2023). Autism Research 16:673–676.Offers a powerful argument that anti-ableism and neurodiversity frameworks do not conflict with scientific accuracy or quality
Calls into question several claims from those arguing ableist language are needed
The text is a letter, authored by a group of autistic researchers, scholars, clinicians, self-advocates, and showcases the importance collaborative work
Hamilton LG, Petty S. 2023. Compassionate pedagogy for neurodiversity in higher education: A conceptual analysis. Frontiers in Psychology 14:1093290.Focuses on the need for educators’ empathy, rather than seeing neurodivergent students as the problem
Concrete illustrations of building positive learning environments
Makes case for neurodiversity-friendly higher education environments
The need for robust theory and methods
Gernsbacher MA, Yergeau M. 2019. Empirical failures of the claim that autistic people lack a theory of mind. Archives of Scientific Psychology 7:102.Challenges the pervasive claim that autistic people lack theory of mind
Offers a critical look at the literature supporting this claim and suggests numerous methodological faults
Concretely illustrates not only how shaky the foundations of this claim are, but also how societally harmful it has been
Cheng Y, Tekola B, Balasubramanian A, Crane L, Leadbitter K. 2023. Neurodiversity and community-led rights-based movements: Barriers and opportunities for global research partnerships. Autism 27:573–577.A very important piece regarding global perspectives of the neurodiversity paradigm and movement
The vast majority of neurodiversity articles derive from WEIRD countries, and so many global perspectives are ignored
Concrete discussions of barriers and opportunities
Integration with open and participatory work
Gourdon-Kanhukamwe A. et al. 2023. Opening up understanding of neurodiversity: A call for applying participatory and open scholarship practices. The Cognitive Psychology Bulletin 8:23–27.Offers a poignant call to redress the power imbalances regarding inclusion in neurodiversity
Particular focus on research, where the practices of open scholarship and participatory work are offered as solutions
Accessible to wider audience, well structured
Heraty S. et al. 2023. Bridge-building between communities: Imagining the future of biomedical autism research. Cell 186:3747–3752.Focuses on tangible ways to strengthen and include neurodiversity perspective in biomedical science
Particularly important given the context of most biomedical research is still being carried with a deficit-oriented perspective
Includes strategies to minimize risks and harm, advocates for the active inclusion of autistic people in the research process

Data availability

No data were generated for this work.

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Decision letter

  1. Peter Rodgers
    Senior and Reviewing Editor; eLife, United Kingdom
  2. Kristen Bottema-Beutel
    Reviewer
  3. Hanna Bertilsdotter-Rosqvist
    Reviewer; Södertörn University, Huddinge, Sweden

In the interests of transparency, eLife publishes the most substantive revision requests and the accompanying author responses.

Decision letter after peer review:

Thank you for submitting your article "An Annotated Introductory Reading List for Neurodiversity" to eLife for consideration as a Feature Article. Your article has been reviewed by three peer reviewers, and the evaluation has been overseen by Peter Rodgers of eLife. The following individuals involved in review of your submission have agreed to reveal their identity: Kristen Bottema-Beutel (reviewer 1); Hanna Bertilsdotter-Rosqvist (reviewer 3).

The reviewers and editors have discussed the reviews and we have drafted this decision letter to help you prepare a revised submission.

General assessments

Reviewer #1:

The authors have provided an informative and comprehensive annotated reading list to introduce scholars and laypeople to key concepts and areas of inquiry within neurodiversity scholarship. The annotated list clarifies complex issues in a way that will be accessible to scholars in a wide variety of disciplines as well as non-scholars.

Overall, this annotated list was a pleasure to read – but I do have a few recommendations for the authors to improve upon what is already an excellent manuscript.Reviewer #2:

Thank you for the opportunity to review this article. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it, as it presents a comprehensive reading list crucial for understanding neurodiversity, particularly for those less familiar with the concept. I appreciate the collaborative efforts between neurodivergent and neurotypical researchers, which enrich the discussions and provide balanced perspectives on various relevant topics. Notably, the article offers clear definitions of terms relevant to neurodiversity, addressing inconsistencies in current usage and establishing a solid foundation for future research to reference. The historical context and related frameworks highlighted, which have at times been overlooked or mistaken, are also valuable.

Overall, I believe this article will serve as a significant resource for a wide audience.

Reviewer #3:

I may be hesitant to this establishing of a "canon" – as it is always situated/constructed, but I also acknowledge that this bibliography is most helpful for newcomers to the field (and I love the methods/the ways this big task has been accomplished).

Summary

The authors have provided an informative and comprehensive annotated reading list to introduce scholars and laypeople to key concepts and areas of inquiry within neurodiversity scholarship. The fact that the article is the result of a collaborative effort involving both neurodivergent and neurotypical researchers enrich the discussions and provides balanced perspectives on various relevant topics. Notably, the article offers clear definitions of terms relevant to neurodiversity, addressing inconsistencies in current usage and establishing a solid foundation for future research to reference. However, there are a number of concerns that need to be addressed, as outlined below.

Essential revisions

1) I recommend clarifying terminology sooner in the manuscript, and using terms consistently. The authors open the paper with the term "neurodiversity", but seem to mean the "neurodiversity paradigm" or "neurodiversity framework" for understanding disability. As the authors clarify in the second paragraph, if "neurodiversity" refers to the biological fact that of neurocognitive variation, it should not be used as a term to describe a conceptual framework.

2) In addition to the helpful definitions of neurodiversity and neurodivergence, it might be beneficial to clarify the distinctions between the two and provide guidance on their usage. This could help reduce confusion and uncertainty, thereby mitigating potential tensions and misunderstandings in the field.

3) The authors should clarify to whom the open call for reading recommendations was made and offer a general sense of who provided recommendations (scholars? laypeople? a mix of both?). I see the details about FORRT in the supplemental materials, but I am not familiar with this platform and am not sure what audiences would have received this call.

4) There do seem to be some seminal texts missing from the annotated list- the list seems to favor briefer articles published in academic journals (Jim Sinclair's piece being an exception). The seminal texts that came to mind are:

Milton, D., Ridout, S., Murray, D., Martin, N., and Mills, R. (2020). The Neurodiversity Reader: Exploring concepts, lived experiences and implications for practice. Hove, UK: Pavilion.

Kapp, S.K. (Ed.) (2020). Autistic community and the neurodiversity movement: stories from the frontline. Palgrave Macmillan (this does appear in the reference list, but is not a selected text)

Walker, N. (2021). Neuroqueer heresies. Autonomous press.

Yergeau, M. (2018). Authoring autism: On rhetoric and neurological queerness. Duke University Press.

I am not necessarily suggesting that these texts need to be included in the annotated list, but the authors may want to make specific mention of them in the text as additional reading, and perhaps clarify that the annotated list favored shorter pieces as opposed to book-length theses or anthologies.

5) One additional omission is issues related to intersectionality, and who is traditionally included in neurodiversity activism and scholarship. There have been a few recent papers published in the journal Autism (one published very recently, so it would have not been available to the authors at the time of their writing) that the authors may want to mention as raising important issues (even if they are not selected for the list):

Cheng, Y., Tekola, B., Balasubramanian, A., Crane, L., and Leadbitter, K. (2023). Neurodiversity and community-led rights-based movements: Barriers and opportunities for global research partnerships. Autism, 27(3), 573-577.

Nair, V. K., Farah, W., and Boveda, M. (2024). Is neurodiversity a Global Northern White paradigm? Autism, 13623613241280835.

6) I have particular concerns regarding the structure of the main theme "Current Topics". The subthemes do not seem to effectively correspond to this overarching theme and would benefit from further categorisation. For instance, the subthemes "Autism" and "ADHD" are not sufficiently informative on their own, and their content could be further extracted and synthesised. The discussion on medical versus neurodiversity-affirming models, for example, emerges as a common current topic across the "Autism", "ADHD", and "Beyond Autism and ADHD" subthemes. Other examples of potential subthemes could be language and identity, the need to expand the scope of neurodiversity, mental health, given the current annotations available. Relatedly, the personal journey of an academic with a diagnosis of depression and ADHD under "ADHD" might be more readily integrated into the section on "The importance of lived experiences".

Overall, the presentation currently feels somewhat disorganised and lack the synthesis needed to effectively highlight current topics in the field. It would also be beneficial to explore how this theme can be expanded, even if it involves including additional items on the reading list, to reflect the broader contemporary discussions relevant to neurodiversity.

[note from the Editor: It is not essential that you revise the subthemes under Current Topics. However, if you retain the current subthemes, please discuss other subthemes that could have been used]

[7] Something I was a bit disappointed in finding, was the relative dominance of scientific papers, as I expect it is much harder for newcomers to the field to find the important community theorising published in social media (blogs/vlogs). So I would have appreciated something more from the blogosphere + suggesting perhaps another section focusing on community theorising, and discussing academic versus community theorising a bit. And when I say this, I also acknowledge that my personal favourites and important inspirations among the community theorists was not included, so I am mindful that this bibliography is just a selection which the authors are clearly stating.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.102467.sa1

Author response

Essential revisions

1) I recommend clarifying terminology sooner in the manuscript, and using terms consistently. The authors open the paper with the term "neurodiversity", but seem to mean the "neurodiversity paradigm" or "neurodiversity framework" for understanding disability. As the authors clarify in the second paragraph, if "neurodiversity" refers to the biological fact that of neurocognitive variation, it should not be used as a term to describe a conceptual framework.

Thank you, this is helpful.

In our revision, we have first redrafted the Introduction such that we open with the term neurodiversity paradigm:

'The neurodiversity paradigm can be seen as a shift in thinking that embraces the diversity of minds, brains, and neurocognition and affirms variation as natural and valuable (Pellicano and den Houting, 2022; Walker, 2021).'

We have also reworked the sections so that we clarify terminology at an earlier stage in the Introduction. Specifically, we have revised the ordering and presentation of our previous paragraphs 1 and 2.

'Like other paradigm shifts, this change in perspective can be challenging to fully understand in the context of education, research, and social thinking. Here, the issue is further compounded as the term ‘neurodiversity’ has broad scope. Numerous definitions of neurodiversity as a movement, a research field, and a framework or paradigm exist (Dwyer, 2022; Milton et al., 2020). These three aspects can be distinguished in the following way: (1) the neurodiversity movement encompasses social, advocacy, and political movements advocating for the rights, inclusion, and acceptance of neurodivergent people; (2) the neurodiversity research field is a largely academic field studying, for instance, psychological and social aspects of neurodiversity; (3) the neurodiversity paradigm or framework is a conceptual framework that at its core challenges medical or deficit-based views of neurodiversity and instead asserts that neurocognitive differences should be seen as natural variations (see Table 1). It is important to acknowledge that neurodiversity is inherently interdisciplinary, and these three aspects can overlap and intersect, and jointly contribute to a more holistic understanding of neurodiversity. For instance, research and activism can intersect in areas such as disability rights, mental health advocacy, social justice, and equity, diversity and inclusion efforts in education and in the workforce (Clouder et al., 2020; Dwyer, 2022; Manalili et al., 2023). Unless specifically discussing one of these aspects, here we generally adopt the term ‘neurodiversity paradigm’ as a broader idea, encompassing ways of thinking applicable to both the neurodiversity movement and the research field.'

Further, we have gone through the full manuscript and ensured we have consistency of terminology use in line with the definitions we offer in the Introduction.

2) In addition to the helpful definitions of neurodiversity and neurodivergence, it might be beneficial to clarify the distinctions between the two and provide guidance on their usage. This could help reduce confusion and uncertainty, thereby mitigating potential tensions and misunderstandings in the field.

Thank you for this suggestion. This is very useful guidance for us, as it is our goal to provide an introductory resource that is indeed helpful and clear. To this end, we have addressed your comment by creating a new table (Table 1), which contains definitions of neurodiversity and neurodivergence. We refer to this table in the Introduction. We have followed the spirit of your comment to reduce confusion and uncertainty, and extended it to a few other terms that might be less clear to a diverse readership. The table contains a brief description of each term as well as further notes. The ‘Further notes’ column uses the term (and so provides a usage example) and offers further clarification and referencing.

3) The authors should clarify to whom the open call for reading recommendations was made and offer a general sense of who provided recommendations (scholars? laypeople? a mix of both?). I see the details about FORRT in the supplemental materials, but I am not familiar with this platform and am not sure what audiences would have received this call.

Thank you, we have addressed this by providing further detail in the manuscript and supplement.

In the manuscript we have added:

'The open call was primarily shared through the Framework for Open and Reproducible Research Training (FORRT) platform, an online collaborative community focused on promoting open scholarship, as well as advancing research and education about neurodiversity.'

In the supplement we have added:

'We believe FORRT reaches a fairly diverse audience of people working in and outside of academia, interested in open science and neurodiversity. Some of our collaborators were already involved in other FORRT projects, whereas others were familiar with FORRT but not involved in this community; some collaborators also joined after hearing about our open call from their own networks.'

4) There do seem to be some seminal texts missing from the annotated list- the list seems to favor briefer articles published in academic journals (Jim Sinclair's piece being an exception). The seminal texts that came to mind are:

Milton, D., Ridout, S., Murray, D., Martin, N., and Mills, R. (2020). The Neurodiversity Reader: Exploring concepts, lived experiences and implications for practice. Hove, UK: Pavilion.

Kapp, S.K. (Ed.) (2020). Autistic community and the neurodiversity movement: stories from the frontline. Palgrave Macmillan (this does appear in the reference list, but is not a selected text)

Walker, N. (2021). Neuroqueer heresies. Autonomous press.

Yergeau, M. (2018). Authoring autism: On rhetoric and neurological queerness. Duke University Press.

I am not necessarily suggesting that these texts need to be included in the annotated list, but the authors may want to make specific mention of them in the text as additional reading, and perhaps clarify that the annotated list favored shorter pieces as opposed to book-length theses or anthologies.

Thank you, this is helpful guidance to receive, and wonderful texts to receive as further recommendations. We had included references to both Kapp (2020) and a section of Walker (2021) but on reflection, as well as examining the other two suggested references more carefully, we agree these are important to more strongly highlight. Indeed, we were initially somewhat hesitant to recommend books and lengthier texts, as we worried the length might discourage newcomers (and have now added more detail in the Methods section in the Supplement regarding accessibility of texts). Equally, some of these texts contain very powerful chapters or sections relating to at times quite distinct topics, and we wondered to what extent we could appropriately annotate the full breadth of issues covered in these texts. For instance, The Neurodiversity Reader covers important topics ranging on diverse issues such as perspectives on autism, neurodiversity beyond autism, female neurodiversity, employment and university experiences, a literature review on person-centered counseling etc. With all this in mind, we have decided not to directly recommend these texts in our themes but rather, we have opted to take a three step approach to better showcase these important texts. First, we better highlight these in the manuscript, second, we have added them as direct recommendations in our new ‘Further readings’ section, and third, we have highlighted them in our References section.

To expand on the first point, we have referenced the texts throughout the manuscript, to better highlight immediate areas of connection and relevance:

  • Milton et al. (2020): We reference this both in our Introduction, in the context of our discussion of the concepts of neurodiversity, as well as in the theme on the importance of lived experience.

  • Kapp (2020): We include this in our discussion of the history of neurodiversity theme, as well as in the theme on autism.

  • Walker (2021): We have more directly highlighted Walker (2021) in our new Table 1, where we both direct readers to this text in the table description, as well as in the table itself as a direct reference.

  • Yergeau (2018): We reference this in our theme on the history of neurodiversity.

On the second point, in our new ‘Further readings’ section, we have added a mention to all these texts.

'We hope the themes discussed here spark an interest in neurodiversity. The current list of themes is not intended as a canonical or definitive organization but is only one of many possible ways to learn more about neurodiversity. As such, we want to offer suggestions for further key readings, as well as other potential themes or topics of interest. Readers interested in extended introductions about the neurodiversity paradigm, movement, and research field, may wish to consider The Neurodiversity Reader (Milton et al., 2020). Detailed accounts about the autistic community, its early development, and key figures should consult Kapp (2020). For deeper theoretical engagement with neurodiversity, as well as critiques to medicalized views and harmful societal viewpoints should see Walker (2021) and Yergeau (2018).'

On the third point, in our References section we have added an * symbol to denote particular texts we recommend for readers interested in further reading. We have marked all four suggested works for further reading there as well.

5) One additional omission is issues related to intersectionality, and who is traditionally included in neurodiversity activism and scholarship. There have been a few recent papers published in the journal Autism (one published very recently, so it would have not been available to the authors at the time of their writing) that the authors may want to mention as raising important issues (even if they are not selected for the list):

Cheng, Y., Tekola, B., Balasubramanian, A., Crane, L., and Leadbitter, K. (2023). Neurodiversity and community-led rights-based movements: Barriers and opportunities for global research partnerships. Autism, 27(3), 573-577.

Nair, V. K., Farah, W., and Boveda, M. (2024). Is neurodiversity a Global Northern White paradigm? Autism, 13623613241280835.

We appreciate the reviewer's thoughtful comment highlighting the critical importance of intersectionality in neurodiversity activism and scholarship – this is something we agree with very much. In our original draft, we had alluded to the importance of intersectionality broadly but on reflection, we see how this was not well fleshed out throughout the manuscript. To this end, we have incorporated both of the references here and revised our manuscript to better clarify the importance of recognizing intersectionality.

Specifically, we highlight Cheng et al. as our recommendation in the theme 'The need for robust theory and methods.' We also use Nair et al. in the same paragraph, alongside a further new reference of Giwa Onaiwu’s (2020) powerful words about her experience as a Black autistic mother to Black autistic children and the importance of racial diversity. This section now reads:

'Further important aspects for developing robust methods for studying neurodiversity include asking useful research questions with relevance to neurodivergent people’s lives and needs (see next theme), questioning who gets to be included in conversations and work on neurodiversity, and understanding neurodiversity as a global, rather than solely western area of research and activism. Historically, the neurodiversity movement has been driven largely by English-speaking White autistic people, primarily from countries in the Global North and there is still a great need to recognize the issue of intersectionality in terms of whose voices have been included in neurodiversity activism and scholarship and whose have been excluded (for instance, on the need for greater racial diversity in autism research, see Giwa Onaiwu, 2020). Indeed, as some have warned, solidifying the homogenization of neurodiversity as a White and western movement could undermine the social justice and emancipatory goals of the movement (Nair, Farah, and Boveda, 2024). Drawing on their collective experiences in Ethiopia, India, and Hong Kong, Cheng and colleagues (2023) can help readers think critically about the issues of intersectionality and inclusion, by discussing a variety of sociocultural and political conditions specific to Asian and African neurodiversity efforts. The authors argye that the neurodiversity movement shares fundamental goals with decolonization agendas such as dismantling what, at times, to some may have seemed as 'objective' scientific efforts that ultimately disparage the truths, knowledge, and priorities of lived experiences (e.g., claims that autistic people lack theory of mind). In this light, decolonizing knowledge production, respecting local theoretical frameworks, indigenous knowledge, and fostering community-led science could be important tools for a more robust study of neurodiversity that does not dehumanize neurodivergent people.'

[6] I have particular concerns regarding the structure of the main theme "Current Topics". The subthemes do not seem to effectively correspond to this overarching theme and would benefit from further categorisation. For instance, the subthemes "Autism" and "ADHD" are not sufficiently informative on their own, and their content could be further extracted and synthesised. The discussion on medical versus neurodiversity-affirming models, for example, emerges as a common current topic across the "Autism", "ADHD", and "Beyond Autism and ADHD" subthemes. Other examples of potential subthemes could be language and identity, the need to expand the scope of neurodiversity, mental health, given the current annotations available. Relatedly, the personal journey of an academic with a diagnosis of depression and ADHD under "ADHD" might be more readily integrated into the section on "The importance of lived experiences".

Overall, the presentation currently feels somewhat disorganised and lack the synthesis needed to effectively highlight current topics in the field. It would also be beneficial to explore how this theme can be expanded, even if it involves including additional items on the reading list, to reflect the broader contemporary discussions relevant to neurodiversity.

[note from the Editor: It is not essential that you revise the subthemes under Current Topics. However, if you retain the current subthemes, please discuss other subthemes that could have been used]

This is valuable feedback, thank you. We understand that the Reviewer’s main concerns here are related to the need to improve how informative the themes are, as well as the overall organization and presentation. We have taken a number of steps to improve these.

First, we have removed the bigger theme headings ('What is neurodiversity?', 'Current topics', 'Improving the field'). As the reviewer points out, there are commonalities shared between some of our themes (such as around language, identity, challenging medical models etc.). From that perspective, we considered that some of these bigger headings implied clear-cut divisions that could be unhelpful (whereas, for instance, some of the current topics relate to an understanding of what neurodiversity is, and some of the topics under ‘Improving the field’ are both current topics and helpful for understanding views of what neurodiversity is).

Second, we have worked to improve specificity of each theme’s content by revising some of the titles.

  • 'Autism': This theme is now called 'A neurodiversity paradigm for autism science'. We believe this now better summarizes the content of the theme, as both of the papers we highlight argue for a neurodiversity paradigm for autism science, albeit with different specific examples.

  • 'ADHD': This theme is now called 'Beyond deficit views of ADHD'. As above, we trust this is now more specific about the content of the theme.

  • 'Beyond Autism and ADHD': This is now called 'Expanding the scope of neurodiversity: diverse neurotypes and experiences'.Third, we have revised our text in order to highlight commonalities between the themes, and better present the content of the themes. In the Introduction, we have expressed this in order to better guide the reader:

'Rather than being completely discrete categories, the themes we present often raise shared discussion points, albeit from different perspectives and with different examples. For instance, commonalities emerge regarding the importance of neurodiversity affirming models over deficit-based views, the use of appropriate language, the need to expand definitions of neurodiversity (for instance, to be inclusive of mental health), and the need for inclusion and centering of lived experience.'

Further, we understand the Reviewer suggests moving the van Gorp (2022) text to the section on lived experience. This was a popular piece and indeed was considered a good fit for both the themes on lived experience and ADHD. After discussions, we decided that we already had many texts highlighting autism and ADHD (in part reflecting the field itself) and that if we highlighted a text on ADHD in the lived experience theme, this would perhaps become even more disproportionate. We see value in using the section on lived experiences to highlight other experiences beyond autism and ADHD as in our view, until recently, such experiences have been less often focused on and acknowledged. Similarly, we also thought it would be beneficial to have a report of one’s lived experience in the ADHD section in regards to the same core issue brought up by the Reviewer in the below comment 7, that is: who gets to be part of conversations about neurodiversity? Although comment 7 focuses on a specific medium as an example (blogs), we believe it also points to a question of who the enunciator is, with which we agree: we do not wish to place too much (or exclusive) emphasis on 'expert' speech or discourse (e.g., academic reports, experiments or interventions).

Lastly, in response to the Editor’s note, we have discussed other subthemes that could have been used in our new section ‘Further readings’:

'It is important to recognize the plurality of important topics in neurodiversity and the inherent subjectivity in thematic categorization. For instance, many of the papers we synthesized here could have been thematically organized in different ways, such as focusing more on the evolution of the neurodiversity paradigm over time, different global and cultural perspectives on neurodiversity, the importance of intersectionality in shaping neurodivergent experiences, better understanding stigma, ableism, and language, as well as charting neurodiversity across the lifespan, or understanding how lived experience not only can drive academic research and theory, but can itself be a theoretical contribution.'

7) Something I was a bit disappointed in finding, was the relative dominance of scientific papers, as I expect it is much harder for newcomers to the field to find the important community theorising published in social media (blogs/vlogs). So I would have appreciated something more from the blogosphere + suggesting perhaps another section focusing on community theorising, and discussing academic versus community theorising a bit. And when I say this, I also acknowledge that my personal favourites and important inspirations among the community theorists was not included, so I am mindful that this bibliography is just a selection which the authors are clearly stating.

Thank you, this is a really important comment. We feel strongly about the inclusion of literature outside the scientific field, and this is why we set our project from the start to be inclusive of non-academic texts. The lead authors also tried to encourage the team to further consider blogs, opinions, manifestos etc. At the same time, we recognize and agree with the Reviewer that we have predominantly highlighted academic texts. In our work process, this emerged as a trend given methodological and practical considerations, chiefly that a certain degree of homogeneity between the chosen texts would perhaps be helpful to newcomers (for instance, most academic articles tend to have a common structure), as well as the fact that most academic articles meet certain standards of evaluation unlike some of the speech we find on blogs, which may often require further forms of specific contextualization.

Nevertheless, we strongly agree with the Reviewer on the importance of highlighting such work further. We have strived to do this in our new ‘Further readings’ sections. We have first reminded readers that this is not a 'canonical' or definitive list (hopefully also addressing Reviewer 3’s comment in the General Assessments):

'Our list of themes is not intended as a canonical or definitive categorization but is only one of many possible ways to learn more about neurodiversity. […] It is important to recognize the plurality of important topics in neurodiversity and the inherent subjectivity in thematic categorization.'

Then, we have discussed the importance of non-academic work and community theorizing, and have offered two starting points as concrete examples:

'Indeed, as online forums and discussions show, the term neurodiversity was collectively developed (Botha et al., 2024; see the History of neurodiversity theme). This is only one of many examples of the power of community discussion and community theorizing (Zisk, 2024). With this in mind, we also wish to encourage interested readers to consider blogs. As one example, we recommend Patrick Dwyer’s blog Autistic Scholar with rich discussions, informed by both academic research and lived experience on contemporary topics such as, for instance, the double empathy problem (Dwyer 2024). Blogs can also chart the evolution and spread of ideas. For instance, Mel Baggs’ important discussion on the history and importance of the concept of neurodivergent ‘cousins’, that is, people who share common communication patterns or social characteristics without necessarily sharing the same neurotype (Baggs, 2016).'

Finally, we also point readers to an existing annotated reading list that focuses on critical autism studies specifically beyond academia (Zisk, 2023):

'We also direct interested readers to consult the reading list by Zisk (2023) on critical autism studies beyond academia.'

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.102467.sa2

Article and author information

Author details

  1. Mirela Zaneva

    Mirela Zaneva is at Christ Church College, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom

    Contribution
    Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal analysis, Supervision, Validation, Investigation, Methodology, Writing – original draft, Project administration, Writing – review and editing
    For correspondence
    mirela.zaneva@chch.ox.ac.uk
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0003-3569-931X
  2. Tao Coll-Martín

    Tao Coll-Martín is at the Mind, Brain, and Behavior Research Center (CIMCYC) and the Department of Behavioral Sciences Methodology, University of Granada, Granada, Spain

    Contribution
    Investigation, Writing – original draft, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Yseult Héjja-Brichard, Tamara Kalandadze, Andrea Kis, Alicja Koperska, Marie Adrienne Robles Manalili and Adrien Mathy
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0002-0591-4018
  3. Yseult Héjja-Brichard

    Yseult Héjja-Brichard is at the CNRS, Montpellier, France and the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, United States

    Contribution
    Investigation, Writing – original draft, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Tao Coll-Martín, Tamara Kalandadze, Andrea Kis, Alicja Koperska, Marie Adrienne Robles Manalili and Adrien Mathy
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0003-3939-3852
  4. Tamara Kalandadze

    Tamara Kalandadze is at Østfold University College, Halden, Norway

    Contribution
    Formal analysis, Validation, Investigation, Writing – original draft
    Contributed equally with
    Tao Coll-Martín, Yseult Héjja-Brichard, Andrea Kis, Alicja Koperska, Marie Adrienne Robles Manalili and Adrien Mathy
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0003-1061-1131
  5. Andrea Kis

    Andrea Kis is in the Department of Industrial Engineering & Innovation Sciences, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, The Netherlands

    Contribution
    Investigation, Writing – original draft, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Tao Coll-Martín, Yseult Héjja-Brichard, Tamara Kalandadze, Alicja Koperska, Marie Adrienne Robles Manalili and Adrien Mathy
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0002-4345-3814
  6. Alicja Koperska

    Alicja Koperska is at the Poznan University of Business and Economics, Poznan, Poland

    Contribution
    Investigation, Writing – original draft, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Tao Coll-Martín, Yseult Héjja-Brichard, Tamara Kalandadze, Andrea Kis, Marie Adrienne Robles Manalili and Adrien Mathy
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0003-2075-7732
  7. Marie Adrienne Robles Manalili

    Marie Adrienne Robles Manalili is at AGHAM Advocates of Science and Technology for the People, Quezon City, Philippines

    Contribution
    Investigation, Writing – original draft, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Tao Coll-Martín, Yseult Héjja-Brichard, Tamara Kalandadze, Andrea Kis, Alicja Koperska and Adrien Mathy
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0003-1564-8865
  8. Adrien Mathy

    Adrien Mathy is at the ULiège Library and the Center of Semiotic and Rhetoric, University of Liege, Liege, Belgium

    Contribution
    Investigation, Writing – original draft, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Tao Coll-Martín, Yseult Héjja-Brichard, Tamara Kalandadze, Andrea Kis, Alicja Koperska and Marie Adrienne Robles Manalili
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0002-8459-359X
  9. Christopher J Graham

    Christopher J Graham is at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh (RCPE), Edinburgh, United Kingdom

    Contribution
    Formal analysis, Validation, Investigation, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Anna Hollis, Robert M Ross and Siu Kit Yeung
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0002-1144-7970
  10. Anna Hollis

    Anna Hollis is at the Queen’s University of Belfast, Belfast, United Kingdom

    Contribution
    Validation, Investigation, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Christopher J Graham, Robert M Ross and Siu Kit Yeung
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0009-0006-6006-8498
  11. Robert M Ross

    Robert M Ross is in the Department of Philosophy, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia

    Contribution
    Formal analysis, Investigation, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Christopher J Graham, Anna Hollis and Siu Kit Yeung
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0001-8711-1675
  12. Siu Kit Yeung

    Siu Kit Yeung is in the Department of Psychology, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China

    Contribution
    Formal analysis, Investigation, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Christopher J Graham, Anna Hollis and Robert M Ross
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0002-5835-0981
  13. Veronica Allen

    Veronica Allen is at the Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands

    Contribution
    Investigation
    Contributed equally with
    Flavio Azevedo, Emily Friedel, Stephanie Fuller, Vaitsa Giannouli, Biljana Gjoneska, Helena Hartmann and Max Korbmacher
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0002-8021-0344
  14. Flavio Azevedo

    Flavio Azevedo is in the Department of Interdisciplinary Social Science, University of Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands

    Contribution
    Supervision, Project administration, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Veronica Allen, Emily Friedel, Stephanie Fuller, Vaitsa Giannouli, Biljana Gjoneska, Helena Hartmann and Max Korbmacher
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0001-9000-8513
  15. Emily Friedel

    Emily Friedel is in the Centre for Social and Early Emotional Development and the School of Psychology, Deakin University, Burwood, Australia

    Contribution
    Validation, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Veronica Allen, Flavio Azevedo, Stephanie Fuller, Vaitsa Giannouli, Biljana Gjoneska, Helena Hartmann and Max Korbmacher
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0009-0001-0917-5398
  16. Stephanie Fuller

    Stephanie Fuller is at Ask Me, I'm an AAC user and is based in the United States

    Contribution
    Investigation, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Veronica Allen, Flavio Azevedo, Emily Friedel, Vaitsa Giannouli, Biljana Gjoneska, Helena Hartmann and Max Korbmacher
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
  17. Vaitsa Giannouli

    Vaitsa Giannouli is at the School of Medicine, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece

    Contribution
    Investigation, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Veronica Allen, Flavio Azevedo, Emily Friedel, Stephanie Fuller, Biljana Gjoneska, Helena Hartmann and Max Korbmacher
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0003-2176-8986
  18. Biljana Gjoneska

    Biljana Gjoneska is at the Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Skopje, North Macedonia

    Contribution
    Investigation, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Veronica Allen, Flavio Azevedo, Emily Friedel, Stephanie Fuller, Vaitsa Giannouli, Helena Hartmann and Max Korbmacher
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0003-1200-6672
  19. Helena Hartmann

    Helena Hartmann is in the Department of Neurology, University Hospital Essen, Essen, Germany

    Contribution
    Investigation, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Veronica Allen, Flavio Azevedo, Emily Friedel, Stephanie Fuller, Vaitsa Giannouli, Biljana Gjoneska and Max Korbmacher
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0002-1331-6683
  20. Max Korbmacher

    Max Korbmacher is at Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Bergen, Norway

    Contribution
    Investigation, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Veronica Allen, Flavio Azevedo, Emily Friedel, Stephanie Fuller, Vaitsa Giannouli, Biljana Gjoneska and Helena Hartmann
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0002-8113-2560
  21. Mahmoud M Elsherif

    Mahmoud M Elsherif is at the University of Birmingham, Birmingham and the University of Leicester, Leicester, United Kingdom

    Contribution
    Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal analysis, Supervision, Validation, Investigation, Methodology, Writing – original draft, Project administration, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Alyssa Hillary Zisk
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0002-0540-3998
  22. Alyssa Hillary Zisk

    Alyssa Hillary Zisk is at the University of Rhode Island, South Kingstown, United States, and Ask Me, I'm an AAC user, United States

    Contribution
    Formal analysis, Supervision, Validation, Investigation, Methodology, Project administration, Writing – review and editing
    Contributed equally with
    Mahmoud M Elsherif
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0003-2266-4855

Funding

Leverhulme Trust

  • Mahmoud M Elsherif

John Templeton Foundation (62631)

  • Robert M Ross

NWO Veni

  • Veronica Allen

Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competiveness (PID2020-114790GB-I00)

  • Tao Coll-Martín

University of Granada (Contrato Puente-Plan Propio UGR)

  • Tao Coll-Martín

The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.

Publication history

  1. Received:
  2. Accepted:
  3. Version of Record published:

Copyright

© 2024, Zaneva et al.

This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.

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  1. Mirela Zaneva
  2. Tao Coll-Martín
  3. Yseult Héjja-Brichard
  4. Tamara Kalandadze
  5. Andrea Kis
  6. Alicja Koperska
  7. Marie Adrienne Robles Manalili
  8. Adrien Mathy
  9. Christopher J Graham
  10. Anna Hollis
  11. Robert M Ross
  12. Siu Kit Yeung
  13. Veronica Allen
  14. Flavio Azevedo
  15. Emily Friedel
  16. Stephanie Fuller
  17. Vaitsa Giannouli
  18. Biljana Gjoneska
  19. Helena Hartmann
  20. Max Korbmacher
  21. Mahmoud M Elsherif
  22. Alyssa Hillary Zisk
(2024)
Point of View: An annotated introductory reading list for neurodiversity
eLife 13:e102467.
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.102467

Further reading

    1. Neuroscience
    Hannah R Martin, Anna Lysakowski, Ruth Anne Eatock
    Research Article

    In amniotes, head motions and tilt are detected by two types of vestibular hair cells (HCs) with strikingly different morphology and physiology. Mature type I HCs express a large and very unusual potassium conductance, gK,L, which activates negative to resting potential, confers very negative resting potentials and low input resistances, and enhances an unusual non-quantal transmission from type I cells onto their calyceal afferent terminals. Following clues pointing to KV1.8 (Kcna10) in the Shaker K channel family as a candidate gK,L subunit, we compared whole-cell voltage-dependent currents from utricular HCs of KV1.8-null mice and littermate controls. We found that KV1.8 is necessary not just for gK,L but also for fast-inactivating and delayed rectifier currents in type II HCs, which activate positive to resting potential. The distinct properties of the three KV1.8-dependent conductances may reflect different mixing with other KV subunits that are reported to be differentially expressed in type I and II HCs. In KV1.8-null HCs of both types, residual outwardly rectifying conductances include KV7 (Knq) channels. Current clamp records show that in both HC types, KV1.8-dependent conductances increase the speed and damping of voltage responses. Features that speed up vestibular receptor potentials and non-quantal afferent transmission may have helped stabilize locomotion as tetrapods moved from water to land.

    1. Cell Biology
    2. Neuroscience
    Lizbeth de La Cruz, Derek Bui ... Oscar Vivas
    Research Article

    Overactivity of the sympathetic nervous system is a hallmark of aging. The cellular mechanisms behind this overactivity remain poorly understood, with most attention paid to likely central nervous system components. In this work, we hypothesized that aging also affects the function of motor neurons in the peripheral sympathetic ganglia. To test this hypothesis, we compared the electrophysiological responses and ion-channel activity of neurons isolated from the superior cervical ganglia of young (12 weeks), middle-aged (64 weeks), and old (115 weeks) mice. These approaches showed that aging does impact the intrinsic properties of sympathetic motor neurons, increasing spontaneous and evoked firing responses. A reduction of M current emerged as a major contributor to age-related hyperexcitability. Thus, it is essential to consider the effect of aging on motor components of the sympathetic reflex as a crucial part of the mechanism involved in sympathetic overactivity.