neurotypicity
English
Etymology
neurotypic + -ity or neurotype + -icity.
Pronunciation
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Noun
neurotypicity (uncountable)
- The property of being neurotypical.
- 2015 December 14, Pietro Barbetta, Enrico Valtellina, “Intuitive pathways of the autistic mind”, in Journal of Medicine and the Person[1], volume 13, , pages 169–177:
- The Australian sociologist Judy Singer used the word neurodiversity for the first time at the end of the 1990s. A new social identity began to have a voice. Such a voice claims that neurodiversity is part of what is called biodiversity. Many autistic people are involved in this attempt to explain neurodiversity and they claim that neurodiversity is an interesting phenomenon even for neurotypical people.
For example, some neurodiverse people might have telepathic abilities that can be misunderstood, by neurotypical people, as a deficit […]. In its more radical stance, the neurodiversity movement has compiled a set of criteria for diagnosing neurotypicity as a disease of the so-called “normal people” in Western society.
- 2019 November 26, Guillaume Lio, Roberta Fadda, Giuseppe Doneddu, Jean‐René Duhamel, Angela Sirigu, “Digit-tracking as a new tactile interface for visual perception analysis”, in Nature Communications[2], volume 10, :
- For each subject, a single score was calculated to quantify the neurotypicity of attention maps obtained in patients (N = 22) and control subjects (N = 22).
See also
- neuronormativity
- neurotypicality
- neurotypicism