Stimming helps people with autism regulate their emotions and behavior. Stimming includes auditory, tactile, visual, vestibular, and proprioceptive actions. Stimming also occurs in people with ADHD ...
Stimming – short for “self-stimulatory behaviour” – is a form of self-soothing commonly seen in autistic people. It can involve repetitive movements, sounds, or actions and is commonly regarded in ...
Tapping a pen, shaking a leg, twirling hair—we have all been in a classroom, meeting, or a public place where we find ourselves or someone else engaging in repetitive behavior—a type of ...
The word “stimming” refers to “self-stimulating behaviour,” one of the diagnostic criteria for autism spectrum disorder. When laypeople think of autistic stimming behaviours, they tend to think of ...
We pretty much all have a rhythm we fall into when the world gets too loud, or our minds feel bored or restless, and it's called stimming. Stimming involves repetitive patterns that are far more than ...
Four children flutter, flap, and rock their way from overwhelmed to centered in an arrestingly illustrated introduction to the concept of self-regulatory movement from Asbell, making his picture book ...