This is the tenth post in my autism awareness month series.
When people think of autism, they often think of Rain Man or Sheldon Cooper. On one end, the severely affected person who needs full-time care. On the other, the socially awkward genius whose extraordinary abilities more than compensate. When I tell friends I am on the spectrum, I often hear: "But you don't look autistic."
Neither stereotype is wrong exactly. Both exist, but neither is representative. The vast middle is invisible, largely because it masks.
Before we go further, let's clarify on terminology. "Asperger's syndrome" is no longer a clinical diagnosis: it was folded into the single autism spectrum disorder classification in 2013. It was often used as shorthand for "high-functioning autistic," which is itself problematic, because functioning labels measure visibility of difficulty, not actual experience. The DSM-5 support levels measure required support, not intelligence, not severity of internal experience. A level 1 autistic person isn't mildly autistic. They're autistic in a way that currently requires less visible support, often because they've learned to compensate. That compensation has a cost that isn't measured.
Now, to address the genius question.
High IQ and autism are independent variables. Autism doesn't cause exceptional intelligence, and most autistic people don't have exceptional IQ. What is true though is that high-IQ autistic people are disproportionately visible: they function in professional environments, get diagnosed later, and are the face of autism in public discourse. The genius stereotype is largely a visibility problem.
What autism contributes, independently of IQ, is the constant information-gathering drive that I described two weeks ago in my fourth post. That drive never reaches a point of satisfaction. High IQ adds processing power to that endless process, producing denser cross-domain connections and stronger pattern recognition as a byproduct. The IQ doesn't change the drive. It simply amplifies the output.
But don't be fooled, this is a double-edged sword! The same wiring that produces unusual thinking also produces the exhaustion, the sensory overload, and the social friction described throughout this series. There is no version that keeps the upside and removes the cost. The consequences are real. But they're located in the mismatch between the wiring and the environment, not in a malfunction. And so the autistic people who seem the better socially adapted (through intellectual masking adjustments) are usually the ones experiencing the most anxiety as a result, and most likely to experience a burnout in their 30s or 40s.
In short: autism is not a cause of genius, but it can work as an amplifier for high throughput brains.
Next: on maintaining friendships, and what gets misread as manipulation.
This is part of my April 2026 autism awareness month series. First published on LinkedIn on 2026-04-22.
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