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“Autism should not be perceived as a ‘male condition’,” say a team of the world’s top autism researchers, observing a slow-moving trend across the past two decades “towards a decreasing male-predominance” (Molecular Autism, 2015 (6:24) 1)
‘[t]he desire to fit in with neurotypical peers may also influence the use of camouflaging behaviours’ (Colvert, E et al. 2019: Unpaginated)