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High tech hot spots like the Valley, and Route 128 outside of Boston, are a curious oxymoron: They're fraternal associations of loners. In these places, if you're a geek living in the high-functioning regions of the spectrum, your chances of meeting someone who shares your perseverating obsession (think Linux or Star Trek) are greatly expanded. As more women enter the IT workplace, guys who might never have had a prayer of finding a kindred spirit suddenly discover that she's hacking Perl scripts in the next cubicle.
One provocative hypothesis that might account for the rise of spectrum disorders in technically adept communities like Silicon Valley, some geneticists speculate, is an increase in assortative mating. Superficially, assortative mating is the blond gentleman who prefers blondes; the hyperverbal intellectual who meets her soul mate in the therapist's waiting room. There are additional pressures and incentives for autistic people to find companionship - if they wish to do so - with someone who is also on the spectrum. Grandin writes, "Marriages work out best when two people with autism marry or when a person marries a handicapped or eccentric spouse.... They are attracted because their intellects work on a similar wavelength."
Brother deprecated.
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Laziness, Impatience, Hubris, and Generosity.
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Re: (offtopic) Geekery may lead to autistic children
by cacharbe (Curate) on Dec 17, 2001 at 21:19 UTC | |
Re (tilly) 1: (offtopic) Geekery may lead to autistic children
by tilly (Archbishop) on Dec 17, 2001 at 21:51 UTC | |
Re: (offtopic) Geekery may lead to autistic children
by Anonymous Monk on Dec 17, 2001 at 21:54 UTC | |
Re: (offtopic) Geekery may lead to autistic children
by kko (Scribe) on Aug 03, 2003 at 02:50 UTC |