2003, Richard Howlin, "Asperger Syndrome in the Adolescent Years", in Asperger Syndrome in Adolescence: Living with the Ups, the Downs, and Things (ed. Liane Holliday Willey), Jessica Kingsley Publishers (2003), →ISBN, page 21:
The growing number of insightful biographical accounts and clinical case studies from high functioning autistic and Aspergian individuals (Grandin 1995; Willey 1999) bears witness to this.
2005, Genevieve Edmonds & Dean Worton, The Asperger Love Guide: A Practical Guide for Adults with Asperger's Syndrome to Seeking, Establishing and Maintaining Successful Relationships, Paul Chapman Publishing (2005), →ISBN, page 65:
However, there are a couple of good books on the market discussing the issues involving[sic] in an Aspergian marriage.
2008, Cornish, "What Aspies Need to Know When Working in the Neurotypical Environment", in Asperger Syndrome and Employment: Adults Speak Out about Asperger Syndrome (ed. Genevieve Edmonds & Luke Beardon), Jessica Kingsley Publishers (2008), →ISBN, page 119:
The secret of a happy and fulfilling Aspergian life is to first know and understand your individual limits and boundaries; […]
2009, Masha Gessen, Perfect Rigor: A Genius and the Mathematical Breakthrough of the Century, Houghton Mifflin (2009), →ISBN, page 177:
In the Aspergian world, conversations are exchanges of information, not exchanges of pleasantries.
As is the Aspergian nature, I'm fanatically organized about some things and disorganized about others, and as luck would have it I lost that piece of paper.
The Aspergian need for R&R—ritual and routine—is a way of controlling our world.
2011, Cornish, "Getting the Right Diagnosis, and Its Impact on Mental Health: Is This The Best the NHS Can Do?", Aspies on Mental Health: Speaking for Ourselves (eds. Luke Beardon & Dean Worton), Jessica Kingsley Publishers (2011), →ISBN, page 78:
I was in a constant state of depression, despair and always on the brink of suicide, and this, as well as all the usual Aspergian 'qualities', kept me in a state of mental and physical exhaustion.
2010, Rudy Simone, Asperger's on the Job: Must-Have Advice for People with Asperger's or High Functioning Autism, and Their Employers, Educators, and Advocates, Future Horizons (2010), →ISBN, page 12:
An Aspergian may be able to talk for hours on their favorite subject, but bring up a local sports team or the weather, and they're stumped (unless that is one of their obsessions).
2011, Cornish, "Getting the Right Diagnosis, and Its Impact on Mental Health: Is This The Best the NHS Can Do?", Aspies on Mental Health: Speaking for Ourselves (eds. Luke Beardon & Dean Worton), Jessica Kingsley Publishers (2011), →ISBN, page 77:
And so, the only thing I could do, being a passive Aspergian was to withdraw into a world of autistic hell.