Authors
Julia Cook, Laura Hull, Laura Crane, William Mandy
Publication date
2021/11/1
Source
Clinical psychology review
Volume
89
Pages
102080
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Some autistic people employ strategies and behaviours to cope with the everyday social world, thereby ‘camouflaging’ their autistic differences and difficulties. This review aimed to systematically appraise and synthesise the current evidence base pertaining to autistic camouflaging. Following a systematic search of eight databases, 29 studies quantifying camouflaging in children and adults with autism diagnoses or high levels of autistic traits were reviewed. The multiple methods used to measure camouflaging broadly fell under two different approaches: internal-external discrepancy or self-report. These approaches appear to relate to two distinct but potentially connected elements of camouflaging: observable behavioural presentations and self-perceived camouflaging efforts. While significant variation was noted across individual study findings, much of the existing literature supported three preliminary findings …
Total citations
202120222023202475411677
Scholar articles
J Cook, L Hull, L Crane, W Mandy - Clinical psychology review, 2021