Autism, Asperger's, violence and mass murder
Author's Note: This article was published in the spring of 2014, but it's just as valid today. You may also enjoy this piece from Psychology today, one I wrote in response to the Newtown killings.
John Elder Robison
* *
Autistic adults are crying foul at a recent Washington Post article that speculates
on a connection between serial killings, mass murder, autism, and head injuries.
The premise of the article is that those things may be connected in more than a
coincidental way, based on a study of mass killers in various databases. Neurodiversity advocates are rightfully
concerned that the story will turn the public against autistic people for no
good reason.
I say, Shame on the Washington
Post for running such an inflammatory headline to promote such a poorly
thought through article.
The ill-considered piece is based on a newly published study – Neurodevelopmental and psychosocial risk
factors in serial killers and mass murderers, by Allely, Minnis, Thompson,
et al. Three of the authors are psychologists
at the University of Glasgow, one is at the University of Gothenberg, and one is
at the Center for Health Science in Inverness, Scotland.
While the original paper has some interesting findings, the
conclusions they reach, and the way they are presented – in my opinion – verge on irresponsible. There is an
overwhelming body of evidence that autistic people end up victimized far more
often that we victimize others. There’s
no prior association between being autistic and premeditated aggressive violence. Articles like the one in the Post lead to further exclusion and
victimization from a fearful uninformed public.
We saw that in the aftermath of the Newtown killings with
the talk about whether Adam Lanza was on the autism spectrum, and by
implication, whether autism was a factor in his crimes. Young people with autism were bullied and
isolated by irrational readers who were stirred up by the media
frenzy.
The whole idea of this latest study is flawed. The issue is simple: correlation does not imply causation. Researchers forget this to their
detriment as they are led to wildly wrong conclusions when two data sets seem
to fit together. I’ll give you an example. Right now, if we compare data from the US
Census and the USDA for the years 2000-2009 we find a near perfect correlation
(.993) between the divorce rate in Maine and the per capita consumption of
margarine.
Who knew margarine consumption predicted divorce with such
accuracy? It (probably) doesn’t. But an ignorant person, looking at the
near-perfect fit, could easily be led to that conclusion if he lacked the
common sense to see through it.
The problem with the Post
article is that common sense isn’t common, the author does not explain this,
and the correlations in the article are not as obviously spurious as margarine
consumption and divorce.
Here’s what they claim: Of 239 killers, the authors concede
that 133 showed no evidence of autism or brain injury. But then comes the shocker: 67 (or 28%) are described as having possible,
probable, or definite autism. That makes
autistic people sound pretty scary, doesn’t it?
It does not make autistic people scary to me, because I’m
informed, and I know the statistic is ridiculous. But people fear what they don’t know, and
there is a lot of ignorance about autism.
The group of serial killers and mass murderers had other common traits,
too, but the authors did not see fit to mention them in the same light. For example:
- · Almost all serial killers and mass murderers are male. Should we be scared of males just because most murderers are male? That’s actually a pretty well-known fact but males remain pretty acceptable in most societies;
- · A majority of serial killers and mass murderers are Caucasian. Caucasians are welcome most places too – at least in the United States and Canada;
- · Of those who are not Caucasian a majority are the predominant race of the land where they killed. “They eat their own,” is a common proverb, and like most proverbs, there’s an element of truth in it;
- · In America, a majority of serial killers and mass murderers came from middle class or affluent backgrounds. Few came from poor backgrounds. That’s a surprise to many but it’s true;
- · In America, the vast majority of serial killers and mass murderers employ both automobiles and firearms in the commission of their crimes. Yet there is very little regulation over the ownership or use of either in most of the United States;
- · A majority of serial killers targeted victims who were physically weaker than themselves – principally women and children. With all the talk of bullying today that comes as no surprise, but it’s not clear how you’d use that insight to avoid a serial killer;
- · Many serial killers target victims who belong to groups scorned or marginalized by the society in which the killer lives. That too is not surprising to anyone reading the news. It’s dangerous to work as a hooker or a drug dealer. If that’s the career path you choose the risk of death at the hands of serial killers is just one of many hazards.
None of the associations above are worrisome, because they are
easily understood and evaluated by a layperson.
Yet every one of them is a stronger match than what the study’s authors
claim for autism.
That takes me to the next issue with this study . . . their
notion of “possible, probable, or definite autism.” Let’s look first at the killers who really
have autism diagnoses in the studied group.
The authors only identified six diagnosed autistic people. With a total population of 239 killers –
mostly male – the latest autism prevalence statistics suggest autism is about
as common in this group as it is in the general population.
Taking that a step further, we could say that the diagnosed
prevalence does not suggest autism per se is a factor in whether someone
becomes a serial killer or not. There are autistic serial killers, blue-eyed
serial killers, and brown-haired serial killers, in similar numbers as will be
found in any other human population. Such observations – while true – don’t
really tell us anything meaningful about why someone becomes a serial killer.
They are just unrelated data points, like the correlation between margarine
consumption and divorce.
If we had a theory for why autism, brown hair, or blue eyes
might make someone into a serial killer, things would be different. But there is no such theory, and in the
absence of one, it is highly inappropriate to make such a suggestion when it
applies to an already-vulnerable population.
Next, let’s look at those “possible or probable” autistic
killers. The authors of the paper
described in the Post called a killer
“possible or probable autistic” on the basis of Internet speculation,
speculation from observers in jail, or speculation based on descriptions of the
individuals.
Armchair diagnosis like that may make for fun conversation,
but it has no medical or psychological validity. It’s speculation, pure and simple. It wouldn’t be allowed in court and it should
not have been allowed here. The
essential problem with speculation in the Aggression
and Violent Behavior article is that most of the observed traits the
authors associated with autism can also be associated with psychopathy and
sociopathy, and I suggest those are more likely explanations given the
demonstrated behavior of the individuals.
This study would have had a lot more validity if they had taken their sample of 239 killers and asked, "What psychological, neurological, or psychosocial issues can we definitely attribute to each killer?" That would have produced a much more nuanced and complex result, but it would have been a result with real meaning. The present study - looking only at autism and head injury - and its possible-probable-definite language, is hogwash.
This study would have had a lot more validity if they had taken their sample of 239 killers and asked, "What psychological, neurological, or psychosocial issues can we definitely attribute to each killer?" That would have produced a much more nuanced and complex result, but it would have been a result with real meaning. The present study - looking only at autism and head injury - and its possible-probable-definite language, is hogwash.
So, in conclusion, I will just repeat - There are no studies
showing a propensity for aggressive violence on the part of autistic
people. This most recent paper – which
has gathered a lot of headlines but little professional praise – does not make
that case either.
John Elder Robison is
an autistic adult and advocate for people with neurological differences. He's the author of Look Me in the Eye, Be
Different, Raising Cubby, and the forthcoming Switched On. He serves on the
Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee of the US Dept of Health and Human
Services and many other autism-related boards.
He's co-founder of the TCS Auto Program (A school for teens with
developmental challenges) and he’s Neurodiversity Scholar in Residence at the
College of William & Mary. The
opinions expressed here are his own.
Comments
The Washington Post writer totally misunderstood the research article. Terrence McCoy, the WP writer, even mislead us by saying in his title "Significant statistical link." The research paper "Neurodevelopmental and psychosocial risk factors in serial killers and mass murderers" (see http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1359178914000305)
has specific words saying "Autism has an association with mass murderers." Nowhere does the research article state statistical significance of a link. Shame on the writer Terrence McCoy - he never even read the research article. AND the researchers who published the report have improperly misled the public with wording such as "Let's build a registry for every known mass murderer to find the link." What Allely did not clarify is that there is only a psychosocial stress factor in an ASD subject who commits mass murder. That is what they should have noted. To me, Psychosocial stressors are the vector of serial killing and mass murder in any person.
I feel dehumanization of autistics by science is the single greatest factor inhibiting advancement in the field. We can't understand that we fear.Much of the science today is fear based. Here is another example where Armegeddon is equated with eveybody being autistic because they weren't touched enough as children, rather than it being a disability of nerve endings. We are hardly past Bettlehiem. http://phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/2014/05/21/the-roots-of-autism-are-in-the-skin/
Woof
Something like 1 in 68 people have an ASD -- 1.5% of the population.
Something like 70 mass murders were committed in the US in the past 2 years, two of whom were committed by folks with autism, Adam Lanza and this kid -- nearly 7% by autistic folks.
That's a matter that bears further investigation!