creators_name: McDowell, Maxson creators_id: maxmcdowell@jungny.com editors_name: Cambray, Joseph editors_name: Knox, Jean type: journalp datestamp: 2011-05-02 17:19:18 lastmod: 2011-05-02 17:19:18 metadata_visibility: show title: Autism, Early Narcissistic Injury, and Self Organization: a Role for the Image of the Mother's Eyes? ispublished: pub subjects: behav-neuro-sci subjects: bio-evo subjects: bio-theory subjects: clin-psy subjects: dev-psy subjects: evol-psy subjects: phil-mind full_text_status: public keywords: autism, narcissistic injury, image of the eye, eye contact, self organization, emergent, archetypal image, dynamic system, pervasive developmental disorder, cascade note: Further evidence for this hypothesis is presented in a paper accepted for publication in Biological Theory (MIT Press) in 2011. abstract: Holland has elucidated the new paradigm of self-organization in complex adaptive systems. This paradigm holds for all living systems, including the personality. In conjunction with the theory of archetypes, self-organization suggests two radical hypotheses, one about early development, the other about the origins of autism. Autism is associated with several medical conditions, with genetic markers, and with infant visual deprivation. None of these factors, however, is either necessary or sufficient to cause autism. It is proposed that each of these factors increases the probability of a primary psychological deficit: failure in the first few weeks to acquire (or retain) the image of the mother’s eyes. These hypotheses were derived from analytic work with patients who have early narcissistic injury and with patients who have mild autistic traits. Both diagnoses may arise from the same initial disturbance: Symington and others have argued that autism is an extreme form of infantile narcissism. Indirect evidence for the image-of-the-eyes hypotheses comes from the evolution of primates, from infant-mother observations, from observations of infant vision, and from experiments on vision in other vertebrates. Byrd recently confirmed that the incidence of autism is increasing dramatically. The image-of-the-eyes hypotheses suggest that this increase may be due to the increased use, in early infancy, of non-maternal childcare including television and video. The search for environmental triggers for autism must be interdisciplinary. This paper makes a timely contribution to that search. date: 2004 date_type: published publication: Journal of Analytical Psychology volume: 49 number: 4 publisher: Wiley-Blackwell pagerange: 495-519 refereed: TRUE referencetext: Als, H., Tronic, E. & Brazelton, T. B. (1980). Stages of early behavioral organization: the study of a sighted infant and a blind infant in interaction with their mothers. In High-Risk Infants and Children, ed. T. M. Field. 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