#monotropism

2025-11-24

Lovely to see Katie starting with this! #monotropism #eduSky

Part of a slide, with a photo of a magnificent rain frog taken from iNaturalist:
passionate interests, monotropic focus, and flow states

(Garau et al. 2023; Heasman et al. 2024; McDonnell & Milton, 2014, Murray et al. 2005; Wood, 2019)

Play and learning
Douglas Edwards :neurodiv:dedicto@zeroes.ca
2025-11-23

@pathfinder @MOULE @autistics My theory of #kaleidotropy β€” which originated as a variant of the #monotropism theory β€” combines these two, with the twist that the intensity of the perceived world originates within us, not merely from failure to filter outside inputs.

N-gated Hacker Newsngate
2025-11-22

Ah, and Monotropismβ€”a riveting tale of endless explanations and updates, delivered in every language imaginable except the one that explains why this article even exists. πŸ₯±πŸ” Spoiler alert: If you were hoping for practical advice, you'll find more in a bowl of alphabet soup. πŸœπŸ“š
monotropism.org/adhd/

2025-11-06

Episode 1 of my new podcast with Tanya Adkin

Neurodiversity in Discussion...

This time we're talking about monotropism, lilipadding, and you know we've got those tangents!

bit.ly/4qNIEH4

#Neurodiversity #Monotropism #Lilipadding #AutisticBurnout #ActuallyAutistic @actuallyautistic @neurodiversity @fergus @mentalhealth

Louis A. M. πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦redshiftdrift@universeodon.com
2025-11-03
THINKING PERSON'S GUIDE TO AUTISMthinkingautismguide.com@web.brid.gy
2025-10-15
2025-10-04

Come and join myself and Tanya Adkin of ND Social Care & Family Services to talk about monotropism and lilipadding in our first live recorded podcast discussion.

Audience members get to ask questions live!

dghndconsultancy.substack.com/

#Monotropism #Monotropic #Lilipadding #AutisticNesting #ActuallyAutistic @actuallyautistic @autisticadvocacy @mentalhealth

2025-09-17

Tomorrow evening, I'm part of the panel at an event launching two short animations I helped make, with Thriving Autistic - 'Discovering You're Autistic' and 'Lightbulb Moments'.

I'm really happy with how they turned out, and I'm excited about sharing them with a wider audience.

I've also got chapters in a bunch of books that are coming out, including 'Someone Like Me', which launches next Thursday with an event at Lighthouse Bookshop (also streaming online). The other three books are about #neurodiversity and #education.

Most of the chapters are about #monotropism, and being @actuallyautistic, and learning.

Details here:
oolong.co.uk/launches-2025/

2025-09-16

It's seven years since I wrote 'Me and Monotropism' for The Psychologist, The British Psychological Society's magazine. Back then, the theory was still relatively little known, despite a quarter of a century of development and application; its authors were all Autistic, and none of them really played the game of academia.

A lot has happened in the seven years since, and the magazine's editor asked if I could pen an update for them. That is now published here, underneath the original article. Enjoy!
#monotropism #autism #ActuallyAutistic
bps.org.uk/psychologist/me-and

Elaurianelaurian
2025-08-23

@autisticrealms A UK based autism advocate and educator with loads of great articles and resources for autistic folk!

autisticrealms.com/

Douglas Edwards :neurodiv:dedicto@zeroes.ca
2025-08-05

@Ferrous @autoperipatetikos @actuallyautistic This is true; precursors of the changes you've made in the theory of #monotropism were already present in the original version. And I just finished Wenn Lawson's "The Passionate Mind" (the first, and so far only, book [as opposed to articles!] on autism I've read since my self-diagnosis), where he notes that #monotropic autistics CAN actually distribute attention effectively IF their interest is engaged.

But to me, that's an indication that the relevant factor is the #autotropic decoupling of attention from the social and physical environment β€” rather than restriction or narrowness or singleness of attention or interest in any sense, however liberally interpreted. Decoupling of attention and interest from the world should, so to speak, be treated as an axiom definitive of the subject matter, rather than a theorem to be derived.

And #monotropic attention is a special case, not a fully general theory. I felt it necessary to introduce the concept of #kaleidotropy because the phenomenology of my experience has been very different from what Wenn Lawson reports. It's much closer to what Kelter reports β€” except that what he experiences as a curse, to me is very much a blessing: "Every possible thought is instantly ten alternate thoughts that quickly grow to many more".

Kelter, M. Being hyperverbal is a real β€” and disabling β€” autistic experience. Thinking Person's Guide to Autism. 2019 July 11. Available from: thinkingautismguide.com/2019/0

2025-08-05

@dedicto @autoperipatetikos this is true, but I would suggest that even there, they significantly alter the meaning of 'restricted range of interests' relative to how people tend to interpret it: 'attention may be broadly distributed over many interests or may be concentrated in a few interests'; 'it is the difference between having few interests highly aroused, the monotropic tendency, and having many interests less highly aroused, the polytropic tendency.'

#monotropism
@actuallyautistic

Douglas Edwards :neurodiv:dedicto@zeroes.ca
2025-08-05

@autoperipatetikos @adelinej @Dianora @pathfinder @Tooden @filmfreak75 @actuallyautistic This article by @Ferrous is my principal source for the newer version of the theory of #monotropism. It is impossible to emphasize too much: I see this theory as by far the most useful and promising of current theories of autism, and I see my theory of #kaleidotropy as an evolutionary further development of it, NOT as a wholesale rejection of the entire approach.

Murray, Fergus. Me and monotropism: a unified theory of autism. Psychologist. 2018 Nov 30. Available from: bps.org.uk/psychologist/me-and.

Douglas Edwards :neurodiv:dedicto@zeroes.ca
2025-08-05

@autoperipatetikos @adelinej @Dianora @pathfinder @Tooden @filmfreak75 @actuallyautistic One mnemonic for the generalizing step from just #monotropism to #autotropy, which includes #kaleidotropy:

A #kaleidoscope and a plain tunnel have one thing in common: they both close off the view of the outside world.

Douglas Edwards :neurodiv:dedicto@zeroes.ca
2025-08-05

@autoperipatetikos @adelinej @Dianora @pathfinder @Tooden @filmfreak75 @actuallyautistic There's a great deal more to it. The later theory of #monotropism tends to draw distinctions between restriction of interests at a single time versus restriction of interests over a lifetime; the former can be restricted while the latter very much is not. And similar fine distinctions.

But my theory of #kaleidotropy, although an outgrowth and further development of #monotropism theory, goes beyond even these newer versions, primarily in two ways, both of which to my knowledge represent new departures:

(1) For at least some of us, the idea that our interests are in ANY way narrow or restricted β€” except transiently on SOME occasions β€” is not just in need of refinement or clarification, it's completely wrong, and even backwards. From our point of view, it is the interests of NEUROTYPICALS that are narrow and restricted! Note that this observation invalidates not only current versions of the theory of monotropism, but also the official DSM criteria for diagnosis of autism.

(2) The fundamental difference between neurotypical and autistic interest and focus of attention has nothing directly to do with wide or narrow focus. It is that neurotypical interest and attention is strongly yoked to the social and physical environment (#ecotropic), while autistic interest and attention is NOT yoked to the environment, but is autonomous (#autotropic). Classical monotropism theory acknowledges, and even emphasizes, this difference, but sees it not as fundamental, but rather as a downstream effect of restricted focus; autistics do not focus on the environment because they CANNOT β€” too much is going on for their restricted attentional focus to handle. But this #autotropic decoupling from the environment can occur even in the complete absence of any quantitative limitations on the amount of attention available. #Autotropism, not limited interest and attention, is fundamental. #Autotropic attention and interest is simply under far fewer constraints than #ecotropic attention and interest. It can indeed be more restricted (#monotropic), but it can also be LESS restricted β€” wider-ranging and more rapidly labile (#kaleidotropic).

Douglas Edwards :neurodiv:dedicto@zeroes.ca
2025-08-05

@autoperipatetikos @adelinej @Dianora @pathfinder @Tooden @filmfreak75 @actuallyautistic I first started researching #monotropism after reading Lynch's 2019 NeuroClastic post, which had led me to self-diagnose. It was one of the 7 axes of autistic characteristics she listed. I was particularly interested in that one. It was the most closely related to my own reflections about my psyche before self-diagnosis. I also had a curious "almost exactly, but not quite" feeling about it. I definitely recognized the intensity of focus β€” but there were other aspects that very much did NOT fit. Looking into the topic further, I found the classic 2005 paper with its emphasis on restricted interests.

Lynch CL. "Autism is a spectrum" doesn't mean what you think. NeuroClastic. 2019 May 4. Available from: neuroclastic.com/its-a-spectru.

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