The authors examined the reliability, sensitivity, and specificity of
DSM-III and DSM-III-R criteria for autism in relation to each other and to
clinical diagnoses in 114 children and adults (52 diagnosed by clinicians'
best judgment as autistic and 62 as nonautistic but developmentally
disordered). They used a standard, structured coding scheme to evaluate
each patient. The reliability of specific criteria was generally high.
Although DSM-III criteria were highly specific, they were less sensitive;
the reverse was true for DSM-III-R. The authors conclude that the
diagnostic concept of autism in DSM-III-R appears to have been
substantially broadened.Abstract Teaser