Asperger's Syndrome, edited by Ami
Klin and colleagues of the Yale University Child Study
Center, contains contributions from 27 authors representing
13 universities, and several agencies and clinical practices
in the United Kingdom, Canada, and the USA. This is a thorough
and sorely needed review of the research, diagnostic process,
treatment options, and outcomes associated with Asperger's
syndrome (AS). Written for professionals, the volume is
research-based, and in this relatively new field of study,
is as useful in elucidating the questions still requiring
investigation as in describing what is currently known.
Several aspects of diagnosis are covered, including the
development of AS as a formal diagnostic category, a review
of clinical features and associated conditions, differential
diagnostic considerations (particularly high functioning
Autism, Schizoid Personality Disorder, developmental language
disorders, and Nonverbal Learning Disability), and special
consideration of the contributions of motor functioning,
social language use, and neuropsychological functioning
to differential diagnosis. Of special interest to neuropsychologists
may be the chapter reviewing neuropsychological and neuroimaging
studies of AS, from which inferences can be drawn about
potential neurodevelopmental processes leading to the manifestations
of this disorder. Other chapters focus on genetic factors,
clinical outcomes in adolescence and adulthood, pharmacological
intervention, and general treatment considerations. A chapter
on assessment suggests practical guidelines for assessment
of cognitive, neuropsychological, communicative, social–emotional,
and adaptive functioning. A set of essays by parents closes
the volume, providing an important reconnection to the everyday
challenges faced by individuals with AS and their families.