>>21354961There is nothing to research, it's nonexistent.
Again, perhaps females do have something resembling male autism, but it's different, it's not the same thing I and some other anons have.
The closest thing to a female autist I've seen is Sabine Hossenfelder the physics YouTuber, yet even her is clearly socially very capable, has videos of herself singing songs etc. Things which I couldn't do in a million years, and even if I were to do them I'd have to drink half a bottle of vodka just as preparation. Not to mention that she's remarkably conformist in her social views, a very female trait which contradicts autism, for autists are non-conformists, because we see the world very logically, and not according to emotion -- doesn't mean we can't make mistakes, we can, but they're non-emotional in nature, usually out of lack of information, laziness, or just some actual mistake in logical reasoning which sometimes can pass unnoticed. When an autist is being conformist he's just lying because he doesn't wish to lose his job, and even then it's difficult for us to lie, we give a "weird vibe" (it's true) and you can kind of sense that we don't actually agree with the majority's view.
I don't think I have ever met a single true woman autist. I've looked for them in every dating app or social situation, and they're just not there. I've met women with narrow, extreme interests; I've met shy women, silent women, weird women, lonely women, but never a woman who had just the same kind of autistic mindset that I have. Not even in the history of literature, philosophy, and science do I seem to find them. The closest examples so far have been Emily Bronte and Emily Dickinson. Maybe they were true autists, but it's hard to tell, given that they lived in a considerably more autistic society than ours, so maybe it's just a combination of shyness + the natural effects of the era (our society became hyper-normie in the 20th century, specially since WWII).