To the Editor: It seems to us that there is a significant overlap between alexithymia and Asperger’s syndrome. The term "alexithymia" was coined by Sifneos in 1972. It is derived from the Greek, with
alexi meaning "no words" and
thymia meaning "mood or emotion." Patients with alexithymia have great difficulty or are unable to describe their feelings and can have problems making sophisticated differentiation of one feeling from another. Their communicative style shows markedly reduced or absent symbolic thinking
+(1). As Warnes
+(2) pointed out, they have "a paucity of fantasies" and "lack the capacity for introspection." They are preoccupied with the "minute detail of external events…[and] are unable to make connections between events, affective arousal and somatic response." Nonverbally, they are "stiff and wooden." They are "mechanical in their object relations." Alexithymic individuals give flat, shallow descriptions of others that lack "psychological counters"
+(2).