Publication | Open Access
Understanding language preference: Autism knowledge, experience of stigma and autism identity
67
Citations
40
References
2022
Year
ConsentSocial Communication DisorderSocial IdentityAutism KnowledgeSyndromic AutismStronger Autism IdentityLanguage DevelopmentAtypical Language DevelopmentAutismPsycholinguisticsLanguage PreferenceSocial SciencesLanguage StudiesAutism DiagnosisLinguisticsPsychologyNeurodiversityAutism Identity
There is ongoing discussion around what language is acceptable when talking about someone with an autism diagnosis, especially regarding person-first (e.g. person with autism) or identity-first (e.g. autistic person) language. We asked 198 Australian adults with an autism diagnosis what terminology they prefer and what they find offensive. We also asked questions to understand their experience of stigma, their autism knowledge and how much they endorse an autism identity, to investigate if these factors were associated with their language preferences. Overall, there was no significant association between these three factors and person-first terminology. For identity-first terms, those who endorse a stronger autism identity tended to find identity-first terms more preferable and less offensive, whereas those who reported greater experiences and internalisation of stigma tended to find identity-first terms less preferable and more offensive. Previous research has tended to ask what language participants prefer. The findings of this work help provide some context as to why people prefer or find offensive specific terms, at least for identity-first language.
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