Gilger J W, Kaplan B J
Department of Child Development, California State University, Los Angeles 90032, USA.
Dev Neuropsychol. 2001;20(2):465-81. doi: 10.1207/S15326942DN2002_2.
This article presents ideas that are, in part, a response to the ambiguity in the neurological research on learning disorders, the growing awareness that developmental disabilities are typically nonspecific and heterogeneous, and the growing scientific literature showing that comorbidity of symptoms and syndromes is the rule rather than the exception. This article proposes the term atypical brain development (ABD) as a unifying concept to assist researchers and educators trying to come to terms with these dilemmas. ABD is meant to serve as an integrative concept of etiology, the expression of which is variable within and across individuals. ABD does not itself represent a specific disorder or disease. It is a term that can be used to address the full range of developmental disorders that are found to be overlapping much of the time in any sample of children. Although similar in spirit to the older term of minimal brain dysfunction (MBD), in that it closely links neurology with behavioral difficulties, ABD as proposed here differs in several ways. In support of the ABD conceptual framework, first, we consider the ABD concept in terms of its superiority to the older notion of MBD. Second, we provide a brief review of the burgeoning literature on the overlap of the various developmental disabilities. Third, we review some of the scientific literature that supports the ABD concept. Our sole purpose in proposing this concept is to initiate dialogue and debate on several critical issues across a wide variety disciplines. Hence, this article is not intended to be a definitive statement of a rigid perspective. It reflects neither a nonmalleable philosophical position, nor any type of condemnation of other perspectives. It does, however, reflect a data-based and philosophical trend visible in the field of learning disabilities, as well as the broader area of childhood developmental disorders.
本文提出的观点,部分是对学习障碍神经学研究中存在的模糊性、对发育障碍通常是非特异性和异质性的认识不断增加,以及越来越多的科学文献表明症状和综合征的共病是常态而非例外的回应。本文提出“非典型脑发育(ABD)”这一术语作为一个统一概念,以帮助研究人员和教育工作者应对这些困境。ABD旨在作为病因学的一个综合概念,其表现形式在个体内部和个体之间存在差异。ABD本身并不代表一种特定的障碍或疾病。它是一个可用于涵盖在任何儿童样本中经常发现相互重叠的所有发育障碍的术语。虽然在精神上与旧术语“轻微脑功能障碍(MBD)”相似,因为它将神经学与行为困难紧密联系起来,但本文提出的ABD在几个方面有所不同。为支持ABD概念框架,首先,我们从其相对于旧概念MBD的优越性方面来考虑ABD概念。其次,我们简要回顾一下关于各种发育障碍重叠的新兴文献。第三,我们回顾一些支持ABD概念的科学文献。我们提出这个概念的唯一目的是引发跨多个学科对几个关键问题的对话和辩论。因此,本文并非旨在对一种僵化观点做出定论性陈述。它既不反映不可改变的哲学立场,也不代表对其他观点的任何形式的谴责。然而,它确实反映了学习障碍领域以及更广泛的儿童发育障碍领域中一种基于数据和哲学的趋势。