17/05/2026
ASD Dismantling the spectrum. https://www.newscientist.com/article/2525037-why-autism-pioneer-uta-frith-wants-to-dismantle-the-spectrum/
Let us start by explaining the basics: Who is Uta Frith?
Uta Frith (born May 25, 1941) is an Emeritus Professor at University College London (UCL). She has spent over 50 years studying how the brain processes information, specifically in relation to developmental disorders. Her
key Contributions:
📋The "Sally-Anne" Test: She co-created this famous experiment to demonstrate that many autistic children struggle with "mentalizing"—the ability to understand that other people have beliefs and intentions different from their own.
📋Weak Central Coherence Theory: She proposed that autism involves a "detail-focused" processing style, where an individual excels at seeing small parts but may struggle to integrate them into a "big picture".
📋Asperger Syndrome: She was one of the first researchers to bring Hans Asperger's work to the English-speaking world, which helped expand the understanding of autism beyond the most severe cases.
📋Mentorship: She mentored some of today’s leading experts in autism, including Simon Baron-Cohen and Tony Attwood.
📋📯Present Ideas: "Dismantling the Spectrum"
The article in your image refers to a recent and controversial stance Frith has taken in 2026. After decades of supporting the "spectrum" model, she now argues that the concept has "widened to the point of collapse".
✅Her Core Arguments:
Meaninglessness of the Diagnosis: She believes the current definition of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is now so broad that it includes people with vastly different needs—from those requiring 24/7 care to those who are highly successful and "hypersensitive"—making the medical label lose its clinical utility.
❕Pathologizing Normalcy: She worries that many traits now labeled as "autism" are actually just normal variations in human personality or social anxiety, potentially leading to over-diagnosis.
🔅Need for Specificity: Frith advocates for splitting the spectrum back into narrower, more precise sub-categories to better define the specific support and medical needs of different groups.
Credit
The New Scientist article titled "Why autism pioneer Uta Frith wants to dismantle the spectrum," published around March or April 2026. The original interview that sparked this discussion was featured in The Times.
A Note from us
As an educator who has worked with kids on the spectrum, and an advocate, I find her perspective interesting.While the "spectrum" is currently the standard medical model, Frith's debate highlights a growing conversation about how to ensure individuals with very high support needs don't get overlooked when the definition of autism becomes very broad. — feeling sceptical but optimistic in London, England 🏴