Autism Spectrum

DESCRIPTION:
The Autism Spectrum and Speaking Under Stress: Communication and Emotional Regulation. Language Difficulties and the Autistic Experience.
AuDHS – when autism and ADHD meet: coping, stress and communication on the autism spectrum
Welcome to our specialised section on AuDHS. When people live with both autism and ADHD, it creates an internal conflict that is often only recognised at a late stage.
Here you will find information on neurodiversity and emotion processing, guidance on AuDHS diagnosis in adults, and answers to why you often fluctuate between inner restlessness and a need for structure. We explore the paradox of sensory overload and boredom on the autism spectrum.🧠 A NOTE ON OUR DESIGN (NEUROINCLUSIVE READING)
We know that long texts are often tiring for neurodivergent minds. That’s why this blog is designed to be AuDHS-friendly:
· TL;DR (Too Long; Didn’t Read): At the start of each article, you’ll find a summary.
· Scannability: Bold text for key terms and bullet points, the most important information at a glance.
· Clarity: No walls of text. Short, digestible paragraphs.
TL;DR
· Many affected people lose the ability to speak in face-to-face conversations, even though they communicate precisely in writing. This is due to a neurobiological symptom.
· Stress directly impairs language processing via the brain’s stress system.
· The processing of emotions and social cues follows a different pathway in people with autism.
· Scripted communication is an effective strategy, an application of self-awareness.
Autism spectrum disorder and ADHD: what it means for the brain
Autism is not an illness. It is a neurological developmental variant, a developmental disorder in the clinical sense, which affects perception, information processing and social interaction.
Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is defined in the DSM-5, the internationally recognised diagnostic manual, as a disorder of social communication and behaviour. The spectrum is broad: being autistic can manifest in very different ways.
If ADHD is also present, i.e. the attention deficit/hyperactivity system is active, the term AuDHS is used. According to current estimates from developmental psychology, this combination affects a significant proportion of diagnosed adults. WHAT THE DSM-5 AND DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY SAY ABOUT THIS
Until the 2013 revision of the DSM-5, the two diagnoses were mutually exclusive. It is now recognised that autism and ADHD can co-occur, with specific interactions that require an individualised diagnosis.
From a clinical perspective – and this is emphasised equally by researchers in developmental and clinical psychology – a differentiated individual diagnosis based on clearly defined criteria is important to provide appropriate support for those affected.
Why is the spectrum so broad?
Autism is not a uniform category with fixed boundaries. No two people with autism are alike. The combination of individual strengths, difficulties and environmental conditions makes each case unique.
This explains why many people affected do not receive a diagnosis for years: their difficulties do not fit the picture that neurotypical people, and often professionals too, have of autism.
Processing: how the autistic brain processes language and signals
The autistic brain processes stimuli differently. This applies to auditory signals, body language, gestures and facial expressions, and particularly to language under time pressure.
What happens in social situations
A face-to-face conversation places many demands on the individual at once. Those affected must:
· Process spoken language, often slowly, sentence by sentence
· Interpret the other person’s facial expressions and tone of voice
· Formulate their own response at the same time
· Recognise the right moment to speak
· Regulate their own stress levels
The autism system processes a great deal of information more thoroughly, but unfiltered. In social interactions, the time available is not enough. The result: verbal responses are delayed or absent.
The role of the amygdala and superior temporal gyrus
Neuroscientific studies have identified two brain regions as particularly important:
· The amygdala is responsible for the emotional assessment of situations and the initiation of the stress response. In people with autism, the amygdala shows altered activation in social situations.
· The superior temporal gyrus, a region of the temporal lobe that plays a key role in processing language, voices and social cues. Connectivity in this area is often impaired in autistic brains.
The result: social situations are more quickly assessed by the nervous system as threatening, even when there is objectively no danger. The stress response is triggered. Language ability declines.
IN A NUTSHELL
When those affected report that they are ' at a loss for words’, they are describing a neurobiological reaction. The brain is in a state of heightened alertness. Language is then only available to a limited extent.
Why writing is easier
Written communication gives the brain what it needs: time and control.
· No simultaneous stress from eye contact or non-verbal cues
· Language processing can take place sequentially rather than simultaneously
· Wording can be checked before it reaches the audience
For many autistic people, writing is the more reliable way to communicate. This strength deserves recognition.
Emotional processing: between feeling and expressing
Many people on the autism spectrum experience emotions very intensely. However, the link between these feelings and verbal expression is often difficult to establish.
Overwhelm as a symptom.
The processing of emotions differs between autistic and neurotypical people. Emotional states are often:
· Recognised with a delay; one only becomes aware of one’s own feelings in retrospect
· Difficult to name, as the linguistic categories for what one is feeling are lacking
· Experienced as complex, with several emotions occurring simultaneously that are difficult to distinguish
· Expressed physically rather than verbally: withdrawal, movement, tone of voice
Furthermore, in social interactions, those affected must both react and process information simultaneously. This is often overwhelming, even if it is not apparent from the outside.
Interpersonal communication and misunderstandings
When autistic people do not respond appropriately to a facial expression or perceive a social situation differently than expected, interpersonal misunderstandings arise. The reason lies in different processing pathways.
Strategies that can help bridge this gap:
· Explicit communication: naming feelings rather than expressing them non-verbally
· Asking questions as a method: “What do you mean by that?” instead of interpreting
· Communicating in writing if the conversation becomes too complex
· Asking for processing time and communicating this to those around you
This ability to communicate explicitly can be improved through conscious self-awareness and individual strategies.
Scripted communication: preparing sentences, reducing stress
Scripts, or prepared phrases, mean structuring conversations in advance, with prepared phrases, opening lines and responses for recurring situations.
This may sound like deception. It is the opposite: a specific method of stress reduction tailored to how the AuDHS system processes information.
What is Scripted Communication
· Preparing phrases for recurring situations (phone calls, greetings, conflicts, cancellations)
· Writing down key points before important conversations
· Writing down questions before doctor’s appointments or visits to government offices
· Unlike masking (concealing autistic traits), Scripted Communication saves energy; it doesn’t cost any
Why is this method particularly effective for AuDHS
The ADHD system makes planning and recall difficult under pressure. The autism system requires more processing time. Together, they make spontaneous verbal communication particularly challenging. Scripted Communication compensates for precisely this combination:
· Cognitive planning takes place outside the stressful situation
· During the conversation, the burden is reduced; recall replaces real-time formulation
· Those affected gain the ability to act in situations that would otherwise be overwhelming
EXAMPLE: TELEPHONE CALLS
Before making the call, write down: who you are, what you want, and the two or three most likely follow-up questions. Place the sheet in front of you. The brain then no longer has to retrieve information and react simultaneously.
EXAMPLE: OVERWHELMING SITUATIONS
Prepare a closing phrase: “I need a quick break; I’ll be back in a moment.” This gives you control without having to explain yourself.
EXAMPLE: CONFLICTS
Prepare an opening line in advance: “I’d like to bring up something that’s been on my mind.” That’s enough to get the conversation started without your stress response blocking your ability to find the right words.
Developing Scripted Communication
· Create a personal library, either digitally or on cards
· Reflect after conversations: What worked? What didn’t?
· Distinguish between routine situations (fixed scripts) and one-off situations (individual preparation)
· Involve trusted individuals; this reduces misunderstandings in your circle.
FOR CONTEXT
Many people prepare for important conversations. For those with AuDHS, scripted communication is often a necessary prerequisite for equal participation in communication, and the nervous system can be supported with the right strategy.
What you can take away
· Language difficulties in conversation have a neurobiological basis in AuDHS.
· Stress activates the brain’s alarm system. Language is then only available to a limited extent.
· Writing as a communication channel is fully effective, and for many autistic people, the more reliable choice.
· Scripted communication helps when the AuDHS system comes under pressure. Preparation involves self-awareness.
· These strengths can be consciously developed with individual support that takes the spectrum seriously.
Allow yourself to prepare for conversations. These are the conditions under which your communication works.
RELATED ARTICLES:
AUDHD: Autism and ADHD – A Complex Combination
ADHD and Autism – Diagnosis within the Spectrum of Neurodiversity
AUDHD & Spoon Theory – More Energy in Everyday Life with ADHD and Autism
Autism and the Double Empathy Problem – Autistic People Are Not Mind-Blind or Unempathetic