English-Language Autism Terminology Preferences of Autistic People and their Parents in the United States: Clustering Illuminates Diverse Views
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Autism terminology preferences are the subject of considerable debate and various studies, the results of which sometimes conflict. This study examined diversity in terminology preferences, in part through clustering, in a United States sample of 3181 non-autistic parents and 2098 autistic people (including 451 autistic parents of autistic children). The study also examined a particularly wide range of language issues: participants rated terms for autism, subgroups within autism, autistic people, autism likelihood, and autistic characteristics. Terminology ratings differed between non-autistic parents, autistic parents, and autistic non-parents, but these differences were generally modest. Clusters revealed greater variability. Almost half of both autistic and non-autistic participants were grouped in the Open Cluster, characterised by liking or neutrality towards most terms. Others, especially among autistic participants, were grouped in the Identity-First Cluster, characterised by support for identity-first language, strong opposition to terms for autism subgroups, and rejection of many pathologising terms. Still others, including many non-autistic but also many autistic participants, were in the Person-First Cluster, characterised by support for person-first language, yet still some skepticism towards autism subgroup terms. These results suggest that there is presently no consensus regarding autism terminology preferences in the United States.