A Surplus of Males
I spent this Tuesday in Washington, reviewing autism
research proposals. I really enjoy that
work, because it puts me among some of the best minds in autism science. In the course of our discussions, an
intriguing question arose.
We know autism is far more common in males, but the reason
why remains elusive. It’s one of those
facts of autism that most people take for granted, and simply accept for what
it is. In earlier essays on this blog I
have considered possible explanations, from Simon Baron Cohen’s theory that
autism is “exaggerated maleness” to reasons why females might be undiagnosed
and undetected.
All the explanations I have heard so far do not account for
this interesting observation:
If the male/female ratio within a society is 50/50, any
random group of families sould have a 50/50 distribution of sons and
daughters. Some families would have one
child, others would have three. Some
would have all sons and others two daughters and a son. Taken together, we would expect the total of
sons and daughters to be equal.
If we assemble a collection of families in which there is at
least one autistic child, that distribution of sons and daughters is not
50/50. It favors the males. Any autism researcher who has worked with
families knows that to be true, even in the absence of hard studies to quantify
it. Why?
All of us know families that have all sons or all
daughters. We don’t make anything more
of that that we do tossing a coin and having it come up heads three times in a
row. Just chance, we say. But when you identify a group of families
with a trait like autism, and they all have more sons than daughters . . .
suddenly it stops looking random and starts to seem the result of something
else.
If this were a roll of the dice, you’d start to think the
dice were loaded.
One explanation is that some parents have a son with autism
and stop having children. So the girls
that might even the male/female ratio are never born. I think that explanation may be true today,
but what about the ages before modern birth control?
Critics might say that we don’t know how autism was
distributed among the sexes a hundred years ago, and that’s true. The autism diagnosis has only existed for
sixty-some years. Yet we do have strong
anecdotal evidence. Using that, some
modern day people have “diagnosed” historical figures with autism based on what
we know of them and their lives. How
many of those individuals are female?
Almost none.
Those “post-mortem diagnoses” are certainly subject to
challenge and I’m sure some are even wrong.
That said, they can’t all be wrong and the male-female ratio in the
known historical record of autism remains strikingly tilted toward the male
side.
Geri Dawson suggested another possible explanation for the
male-female imbalance. What if girl
embryos are actually more susceptible to some factor implicated in autism, but
in a different way? The factor that
produces autistic baby boys might result in unsuccessful pregnancies when the
fetus is female. The result – fewer baby
girls with autism are born.
To the best of my knowledge, no one has studied pregnancies
in families with autism. All that has
been studied are the resultant children.
We don’t know how many miscarriages may have preceded or followed the
birth of an autistic boy. The incidence
of miscarriage in general has been studied and it would be interesting to know
if families with autism deviate from the norms in that regard.
The son-daughter imbalance certainly ties in with the
Baron-Cohen “maleness” theory. If autism
indeed an expression of excessively male genetic material, that imbalance might
result in more males being born in those families.
I spoke to several scientists and it became clear that this
is one of those obvious questions that has never really been answered. There is the general belief that autism
families contain more males, but we have no hard data to illustrate the
difference. We also don’t have any multi
generational data, which could shed light on the heritability of the condition.
In my own family, I have one child, a son with
Asperger’s. My father had many Aspergian
traits, but he died before anyone thought to explore that possibility. He had a brother, and no sisters. His father also had a brother and no
sisters. His grandfather had three
brothers and a sister. Is there a
pattern there that relates to autism? I
really don’t know.
It would be very interesting to see a study that addressed
this question. Perhaps a grad student
somewhere will read this, and bring a research proposal to our next review
meeting . . . .
Stranger things have happened.
Comments
Yes, I agree, like a certain 9th grade dropout I know being appointed to review all of these scientific studies at taxpayer expense.
My sister has two boys, both have been diagnosed as being on the Autism spectrum. I believe both diagnoses have been changed to Asperger's...or at least high-functioning autism. I don't believe anyone in her husband's family has it - and though I often felt my father was a bit Aspergian, he was never officially diagnosed.
My own three children have not been diagnosed with any type of Autism disorder, but I've often thought my two boys had Aspergian traits (though mild). My youngest is a girl, and as of yet doesn't seem to display any of the traits.
My mother went to a lecture on Asperger's with my sister a couple years ago and felt that the Aspergian traits they described fit a lot of things about me growing up (and I'm a woman). I do think they'll find that women are often misdiagnosed and don't display symptoms the same way. Women communicate so much differently than men anyway - so I think it would make sense they would display different symptoms of Asperger's or the like.
I know you think you would make a better science reviewer than me, and I have encouraged you to pursue that dream. The fact is, it's not an either-or situation where they would choose your or me. We are not the only autistic people in the world who are ready to do this, and there is room for more than one. You are welcome to offer yourself up to the funding organizations, and be judged by your performance. It is not necessary to knock me down to build yourself up.
Best wishes
John
John, I wouldn't put any stock in Baron-Cohen's "maleness" BS. It completely undermines females on the Spectrum and in the process undermines a real understanding of the Spectrum as a whole. I know several ladies who are peeved at this and I agree with them - to the point that it resulted in me giving Baron-Cohen an HMP award. It's rubbish and should be thrown in the bin.
Personally, I think when the whole Spectrum is fully understood the ratio difference will drop. I'm certain that many females are going undiagnosed. Once that's revealed, I'm hoping that someone will finally go after the sensory overload theory I hold to.
AS funded a study of roughly 700 families with autism to look at the chances of having more than one kid with autism. In that study, every sibling was evaluated for autism using a "gold standard" test like the ADOS.
Presumably, in that environment, the females with autism would be picked up. Yet the male-female ratio remained imbalanced even there.
The testing was done at age 2-4, long before boys would be geeks or girls be shy and cute.
Like I said, I really don't know the answer. The more you think of it, the more interesting the question is.
The point of this story was that there is still a surplus of males in the autism-affected families, diagnosed or otherwise. Why the population imbalance?
And yes, there is a predominance of boys in most of the families. I myself have 2 boys, one with autism.
I'd love to see some studies done on this as well. Thanks for the thought provoking post.
That aside, interesting post, and food for thought.
But that could simply be because females didn't tend to be honored in the historical record until fairly recently; they had much more constrained academic and professional choices that might've led to them even being documented in the historical record. So this argument is unconvincing to me.
One historical woman who I would speculate was undiagnosed with a spectrum condition was Alice B. Sheldon, who wrote sci-fi under the pen name James Tiptree, Jr. If you haven't read her biography by Julie Phillips, I really, really recommend it. (Aspie or no, she was a fascinating woman.)
That said, it may still be the case that males are overrepresented, and I'm really fascinated by possible autism/sex/gender links. I've always felt that my mind works more like a boy's than a girl's, and also felt more gender-fluid than other girls. But I wouldn't be convinced of it by examples available in the historical record.