Systems Generated Trauma Report web
Open Society
A dangerous assumption? | SEN Magazine
Progress Principle — Joey Cofone
Progress Principle
Part One - Trauma Informed Practice as the New Tick Box
The Dilution of Transformative Language in Professional Practice
History of Monotropism – Monotropism
Fergus Murray and Wenn Lawson (2022) See also the archive of Dinah Murray’s work. Dinah Murray completed her PhD in psycholinguistics at University College London in 1985, with the title ‘Lan…
Guide To Accessing Healthcare For Autistic People - DGH Neurodivergent Consultancy
An Autistic guide to accessing healthcare written by an Autistic person.
Blog: Beyond behaviour … respecting your child's monotropic flow | Autism Central
Autistic psychotherapist Alexis Quinn explains how understanding monotropism has been the key to reducing conflict, supporting learning and protecting her children's sense of self (and her sanity).
Study debunks Trump claim that paracetamol causes autism | Autism | The Guardian
Taking drug in pregnancy does not raise chances of autism, ADHD or intellectual disability, ‘gold standard’ review finds
Uprooting autistic myths planted by the father of ABA • Buttondown
"...autistic people don't lack humanity. Research just lacked the humanity to
see it."
The Scale of the Spectrum: Insight into Autistic Experiences
This book draws on personal stories and insights from autistic people with high and low support needs to present these individuals as equally capable of offering useful and relevant insights, and by doing so argues against the dividing up of some autistic groups from others.
If your school is designed for the 26%, then don’t be surprised if… | @mcleod
I kicked off a new principal licensure cohort this week. It’s always fun to meet a fresh group of graduate students for the first time. They bring new energy and perspectives, new experiences and e…
Interoception in Autism, Pitfalls, and Promise: A Participatory Research Perspective - Eleanor R. Palser, Wenn B. Lawson, Emma Goodall, Elizabeth Pellicano, 2026
Bodily autonomy is essential to Autistic well-being. Interoception supports bodily autonomy through guiding behavior in support of homeostasis. Promoting adapti...
Ocalicon 2015 Poster: Thinking Types of Autism, Chaos Patterns and Outcome Diversity – Peripheral Minds of Autism
Neurosocial and Neuroperipheral Through the Lens of Monotropism
Neurosocial and Neuroperipheral Through the Lens of Monotropism
Monotropism, a framework developed by Dinah Murray, describes how attentional resources are organized—whether attention is broadly distributed across many channels or deeply focused into fewer priorities at a time.
Many people have asked for clearer definitions of neurosocial (NS) and neuroperipheral (NP), and how these terms relate to the neurodiversity movement’s language of neurotypical and neurodivergent. This document responds by clarifying these distinctions through the lens of monotropism.
NS and NP are parallel identity terms, not replacements. They describe functional patterns of attention, prediction, and energy regulation rather than diagnostic categories or social identity alone. While neurotypical and neurodivergent language has been essential for visibility, rights, and community formation, it does not always map cleanly onto the regulatory strategies that shape how people allocate attention, manage stress, and engage with complex environments.
These distinctions reflect long-recognized patterns in human communities, which have always included both stabilizing individuals, whose regulatory strategies support social coordination and distributed attention, and peripheral individuals, artists, explorers, pattern-seekers, and deep specialists whose depth-oriented cognition supports adaptation and growth. This is cooperative neurodiversity: diverse regulatory strategies as a normal feature of functioning systems.
Within CAS materials:
Neurosocial refers to attentional and regulatory patterns most commonly supported and rewarded in contemporary social systems, including distributed attention, rapid context switching, and social synchronization.
Neuroperipheral refers to patterns that tend to operate at the edges of these systems, prioritizing depth, precision, and sustained focus, often at higher energetic cost when environments demand constant switching or unpredictability.
Through a monotropism lens, NS profiles more often rely on polytropic attention, while NP profiles more often rely on monotropic attention—selective, sustained, and deep. This reflects differences in regulatory organization, not differences in capability or value.
This framing helps clarify a persistent source of confusion in neurodiversity conversations: the assumption that neurotypicality represents a single healthy norm and neurodivergence represents deviation or deficit. Instead, distress often arises from misalignment between system demands and regulatory capacity.
When NP individuals are required to operate as though they have NS regulatory architecture—constantly switching, broadly monitoring, and socially synchronizing—the energetic cost compounds. The issue is not the peripheral pattern; it is the mismatch and the neurosocial niche creation.
2015 Poster
https://lnkd.in/gFxefasS
The History of Web Design, 1993–2012: Season 5 Launch | Cybercultural
Introducing Cybercultural's history of web design, from the grey web pages of 1993 to the colorful, mobile-centric web designs of 2012. A celebration of the peak years of personal websites and blogs.
Joe Gebbia, America’s first chief design officer, is reshaping the government in Trump’s image - Fast Company
The president decimated the U.S. government’s digital design agencies and replaced them with a personal propaganda czar.
Speaking from the in-between: Neurotypical perspectivelessness, neurodivergent authority, and the politics of knowledge - ScienceDirect
This study examines how neurodivergent undergraduates navigate higher education by theorizing neurotypical perspectivelessness—the institutional erasu…
Improving eye care access for autistic people: applying the autistic SPACE framework: Clinical and Experimental Optometry: Vol 0, No 0 - Get Access
Published in Clinical and Experimental Optometry (Ahead of Print, 2026)
Non-Religious Cults: Danger Hiding in Plain Sight
An Introduction to the Series and its Author
Beware of love bombing in the workplace | INTHEBLACK
Can clothes really influence how today's knowledge workers get the job done or advance their careers? Take a look inside Gen Z's new "business casual".
Post | Feed | LinkedIn
They pathologised my flow state. They called it “perseveration.” Said I was “inflexible.” Tried to fix something that wasn’t broken, just interrupted.
But what they called dysfunction was how I survived. Deep focus, time blindness, repetition; ok, if we’re pathologising, they’re symptoms.
But they’re also anchors. Safety. Joy. Control. Being utterly absorbed. My way of filtering the noise. It could be work, or playing Rollercoaster Tycoon until it was suddenly dark outside, and I was dehydrated.
New research says what many of us have known all along:
Autistic folks don’t just experience flow.
We live there.
We build entire worlds from it.
And when we’re allowed to stay in that state? We’re powerful as fuck.
It’s about peace, not productivity and being a commodity.
It’s about being left the hell alone to do what our brains were built to do.
If you’re autistic and you’ve been shamed for how you think, focus, or stim (of course you have)
Remember this:
Your flow state is sacred.
A feature.
Neurotypical folks are encouraged to get into flow. Hold on to yours when it arrives because transitioning from inertia is hard, and hitting that sweet spot lets us get shit done.
What the World Got Wrong About Autistic People | Psychology Today
For decades, autism research compared autistic people to animals, denied them moral sensitivity, and assumed autistic traits made them miserable. All wrong.
Where Was My Generic Prescription Drug Made? - Rx Inspector - ProPublica
How the hell are you supposed to have a career in tech in 2026? - Anil Dash
A blog about making culture. Since 1999.
Learn Makaton with Mr Tumble and Justin from Something Special | Mr Tumble and Friends - YouTube
SUBSCRIBE TO MR TUMBLE AND FREINDS 👉 https://bbc.in/3fCetyRLearn Makaton with Justin Fletcher and Mr Tumble from Something Special!00:00 Spring Makaton sign...
Diverse Pathways for Early Childhood - YouTube
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Everything Is Television - Derek Thompson
A theory of culture and attention
Chapman-acritiqueofcriticalpsychiaty.pdf - Google Drive
Are We All Just Having 'Understandable Human Reactions'?
Sami Timimi's new book paints neurodivergent and trans people as dupes of neoliberalism
Fbdedcb jules joanne gleeson transgender marxism