Parents, teachers, and even doctors often ask: How does autism happen exactly? Understanding how autism occurs – in the brain, in development, and in day-to-day life – can transform how you support an autistic child or adult.
1. How Autism Occurs: The Big Picture
The process begins in the first and second trimester of pregnancy, when the brain is forming its basic structure and neural pathways. Genetic factors change how neurons migrate, how synaptic connections form, and how different brain regions are wired to communicate with each other.
2. What Happens in the Brain in Autism
Atypical Brain Connectivity
Some brain regions are over-connected (particularly within local networks) while others are under-connected across longer distances. The autistic brain is extremely efficient in some areas and less integrated in others.
Synaptic Differences
The junctions (synapses) between neurons form and prune differently. Many autism-linked genes control synapse formation – resulting in atypically formed connections.
Early Brain Overgrowth
Many autistic children show unusually rapid brain volume growth in the first 1-2 years of life. The frontal and temporal lobes are most affected.
Excitatory/Inhibitory Imbalance
The balance between exciting (glutamate) and calming (GABA) signals may be disrupted – explaining sensory hypersensitivity, anxiety, and in some cases seizures.
Mirror Neuron Differences
Mirror neurons fire when we observe others’ actions. Differences in their functioning may contribute to challenges with social imitation and empathy recognition.
Amygdala Activity
The amygdala tends to be hyperactive in many autistic individuals, contributing to heightened emotional responses and the overwhelm of busy social environments.
3. How Autism Develops from Infancy to Adulthood
Birth to 6 Months
Some infants show early signs: reduced eye contact, limited social smiling, unusual responses to name. Many families do not notice anything at this stage.
6 to 12 Months
Reduced back-and-forth babbling, limited social engagement, less pointing and waving. Some babies appear to develop normally during this period.
12 to 24 Months
The period most families first notice concerns. Signs include not responding to name, limited words by 16 months, no two-word phrases by 24 months, limited pretend play. Some children lose previously acquired words (regression).
2 to 5 Years
Autism is most commonly diagnosed at this stage in India. Differences in social play, language, repetitive behaviours, and sensory responses become more visible in nursery and preschool settings.
School Age (5-12 Years)
School brings new social demands that highlight autistic differences. Meltdowns, anxiety, and learning differences often emerge here for the first time.
Adolescence and Adulthood
Autism continues into adulthood – it is lifelong. With the right support, many autistic adults lead independent, fulfilling lives. Some are diagnosed for the first time as adults.
4. How Autism Presents Itself – The Spectrum
| Domain | How Autism May Present | Indian Context |
|---|---|---|
| Social Communication | Difficulty with unwritten social rules, small talk, reading facial expressions; very literal interpretation of language | Seen as rude or withdrawn at family gatherings |
| Repetitive Behaviours | Rocking, hand-flapping, lining up objects, strict routines | Misread as bad habits needing discipline |
| Sensory Sensitivities | Overwhelmed by noise, textures, bright lights, smells | Distress at loud Indian festivals and crowded markets |
| Language | Ranges from non-verbal to highly verbose; may have advanced vocabulary but struggle with conversation | Late talkers often dismissed as lazy or stubborn |
| Strengths | Intense interests, excellent memory, logical thinking, pattern recognition | Many autistic children excel in maths, music, drawing |
5. How Often Does Autism Occur? Global and India Data
6. How Autism Affects Everyday Life
Communication
Conversations may feel one-directional. Sarcasm and indirect speech may be missed. Some autistic individuals use AAC devices instead of spoken language.
Social Situations
Large gatherings, unwritten social rules, and group dynamics can be exhausting or overwhelming. This is cognitive overload, not rudeness.
Routines and Change
Predictability feels safe and necessary. Unexpected changes can trigger significant distress – this is a genuine neurological need for consistency.
Sensory Processing
Sounds, lights, smells, textures may be experienced far more intensely. A crowded market or wedding venue can be a genuinely painful sensory experience.
School and Learning
Autistic children often have spiky learning profiles – exceptional in some areas, challenged in others. Traditional classroom formats can be particularly difficult.
Strengths in Daily Life
Many autistic people excel with routines, technical skills, creative work, mathematics, music, and art. In structured environments they thrive.
7. What Happens After an Autism Assessment
| Step | What Happens | Where in India |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Confirm Diagnosis | Developmental paediatrician or child psychiatrist formally assesses using ADOS-2 and DSM-5 criteria | AIIMS, NIMHANS, large private hospitals |
| 2. Multidisciplinary Assessment | Speech therapy, occupational therapy, psychological assessment | Therapy centres in major cities |
| 3. Begin Early Intervention | Start speech therapy, OT, ABA or developmental therapies | City-based autism therapy centres and NGOs |
| 4. School Planning | Inclusive school placement or special school; IEP development | Under Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan and RPWD Act 2016 |
| 5. Legal Protections | Apply for Disability Certificate under National Trust Act | District Social Welfare Office |
| 6. Parent Support | Connect with Action for Autism (AFA) or local parent groups | AFA helpline, WhatsApp groups, local NGOs |
8. Do We Know Everything About How Autism Happens?
Honest answer: no. We know a great deal – the genetic architecture, the brain development timeline, the neurological differences, the environmental interactions. But we do not yet have a complete, unified explanation of exactly how autism happens in every individual.
Apne bachche ki unique needs ko samjhein
Knowing how autism happens is one thing. Knowing how your specific child experiences the world – their sensory triggers, their strengths, their support needs – is what truly makes a difference every day.
Free Sensory Profile and Support Tool for ParentsFrequently Asked Questions
How does autism happen?
What happens in the brain in autism?
How does autism present itself?
How often does autism occur?
How does autism affect everyday life?
What happens after an autism assessment?
Do we know how autism happens for sure?
Sources: DSM-5, WHO ICD-11, NIMHANS, CDC 2023, Nature Neuroscience, Action for Autism India.
