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  2. Oct 3, 2015 · But just 1 year later, paediatrician Hans Asperger, at the University of Vienna in Austria, wrote an article describing a group of children in his clinic who shared many of the same features. Kanner's paper became highly cited and high profile, whereas Asperger's article went almost unnoticed.

  3. Jan 25, 2016 · Abstract. First described in 1944 by Hans Asperger (1944), it was not before 1994 that Asperger Syndrome (AS) was included in the fourth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, only to disappear in the Manual’s fifth edition in 2013. During its brief existence as a diagnostic entity, AS aroused immense interest ...

    • J. B. Barahona-Corrêa, Carlos N. Filipe
    • 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.02024
    • 2016
    • Front Psychol. 2015; 6: 2024.
  4. Jan 1, 2018 · Hans Asperger (1906–1980) is credited along with Leo Kanner (1894–1981) as one of the “discoverers” of autism. Asperger’s pioneering work was published in 1944 as a Habilitation, a second dissertation at the University of Vienna.

    • gmhudak@uncg.edu
  5. In the last ten years there has been an increasing interest in Hans Asperger and his syndrome. This volume makes a start in answering some of the questions that are now being asked. It contains a translation of Asperger's 1944 paper, and in addition, presents reviews of current concepts of autism.

    • Uta Frith
    • 1991
  6. Sep 2, 2015 · In 1938, an Austrian pediatrician named Hans Asperger gave the first public talk on autism in history. Asperger was speaking to an audience of Nazis, and he feared that his patients —...

  7. Aug 1, 2011 · Understanding the evolution of autism as a concept, and reviewing the efforts that have been made over the last seven decades to describe and treat children with autism, will help us conceptualize and appreciate the tremendous advances in understanding this disorder.

  8. This chapter traces the twin careers of Leo Kanner in the US and Hans Asperger in Austria. Both worked in settings informed by new psychological theories about difference and disability. Both were faced with eugenic discourses.

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