Journal
JOURNAL OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY
Volume 63, Issue 4, Pages 418-420Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jcpp.13589
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This article discusses the transdiagnostic revolution in neurodevelopmental disorders and highlights the lack of mapping between current classification methods and research data at various levels. The authors argue that traditional diagnostic taxonomies are not suitable for explaining variability and complexity, and propose the use of transdiagnostic methods. In this commentary, the alignment between the transdiagnostic revolution and the neurodiversity paradigm is explored, and the potential of transdiagnostic methods in promoting neurodiversity-affirmative research and practice is identified.
In their comprehensive and articulate paper on the Transdiagnostic Revolution in Neurodevelopmental Disorders, Astle, Holmes, Kievit and Gathercole (2021) 'consider how well current classifications of neurodevelopmental disorders serve our understanding'. They examine the lack of mapping between clinical diagnoses such as ADHD or autism and research data at other levels of explanation, including genetics, neural structure and function, and cognition. The authors come to the conclusion that, if our goal is to explain variability and complexity, understand mechanisms and guide support decisions, 'diagnostic taxonomies that classify individuals in terms of discrete categories are ill-suited'. In this commentary, I explore alignment between their account of the transdiagnostic revolution and the neurodiversity paradigm and identify how transdiagnostic methods may promote neurodiversity-affirmative research and practice.
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