stimmer
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From stim (“any repetitive self-stimulating action”) + -er.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]stimmer (plural stimmers)
- (psychology, autism) One who engages in stimming behaviour.
- 2006, Donna Satterlee Ross, Kelly Ann Jolly, editors, That's Life with Autism: Tales and Tips for Families with Autism[1], page 125:
- Most people probably wouldn't guess either of them had autism since they are both so high functioning; Dillon is a “stimmer” though—lots of hand flapping.
- 2010, Mark Osteen, One of Us: A Family's Life with Autism[2], page 148:
- Cam is a first-class stimmer. The stims have passed through stages, each more obsessive than the last.
- 2021, Erin Felepchuk, “Stimming, Improvisation, and COVID-19: (Re)negotiating Autistic Sensory Regulation During a Pandemic”, in Disability Studies Quarterly, volume 41, number 3:
- We are also perpetual stimmers: displaying or masking our stims, engaging in self-injurious or artistic stims, creatively expressing ourselves, or responding to trauma or stim suppression.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:stimmer.