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The word neurodiversity first appeared in publication in 1998, in an article by American journalist Harvey Blume, [24] as a portmanteau of the words neurological diversity, which had been used as early as 1996 in online spaces such as InLv to describe the growing concept of a natural diversity in humanity's neurological expression. [3]
In 2016, she published the book Neurodiversity: The Birth of an Idea. [11] Singer has distanced herself from the expansion of the term neurodiversity outside of her original focus on "high functioning" autism awareness when coining the term, stating: “I was very clear in my thesis that I was only talking about Asperger’s." [12]
According to , "The term neurodiversity was put forward by Judy Singer, an Australian whose mother and daughter have Asperger’s and who is on the spectrum herself, and was first published by the American writer Harvey Blume." Q0 00:47, 28 June 2008 (UTC) The first to print with the term was Harvey Blume.
The term "neurodiversity" was first published in Singer's 1998 Honours thesis [29] [30] and in Blume's 1998 article in The Atlantic. [31] Blume was an early self-advocate who predicted the role the Internet would play in fostering the international neurodiversity movement.
The automaker "cannot keep up at the top of the table at the moment” in China’s EV sector, VW chief Oliver Blume told Germany's Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in a Friday interview, as spotted ...
Judy Blume's latest honor is a new prize named for a former first lady. The Eleanor Roosevelt Center and the Fisher Center at Bard College announced Thursday that Blume is the first-ever recipient ...
Blume discussed the concept of neurological diversity with Australian sociologist Judy Singer. [37] The term "neurodiversity" was first published in Judy Singer's 1998 Honours thesis [38] [39] and in Harvey Blume's 1998 article in The Atlantic. [40]
Judy Blume is clarifying her support for the transgender community after sharing in a new interview with the Sunday Times that she is "behind" fellow author J.K. Rowling "100%," which some took as ...