high-functioning
See also: high functioning
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Compound of high + functioning
Adjective
high-functioning (comparative more high-functioning or higher functioning or higher-functioning, superlative most high-functioning or highest functioning or highest-functioning)
- Functioning or operating at a high level.
- 1978, Allen E. Bergen; Sol Louis Garfield, Handbook of Psychotherapy and Behavior Change: An Empirical Analysis, New York: Wiley, →ISBN, page 944:
- The high-functioning therapists were found to have a greater tendency to confront patients and, when they did so, confronted them with their resources.
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- (psychology, of persons with developmental or intellectual disability or mental illness) Able to function in society; not greatly affected by disability or illness.
- 1986 January 1, R.M. Fox, D.R. Bechtel, C. Bird, J. Livesay, and R. Bittle, “A comprehensive institutional treatment program for aggressive-disruptive high functioning mentally retarded persons”, in Behavioral Residential Treatment, volume 1, number 1, ISSN 0884-5581, pages 39-56:
- A unit wide behavioral programming system for high functioning mentally retarded clients who displayed maladaptive behavioral excesses...
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- (psychology, of persons with autism) Showing relatively high cognitive function.
- 1996 August 1, Don J. Siegel and Nancy J. Minshew, “Wechsler IQ profiles in diagnosis of high-functioning autism”, in Journal of Autism & Developmental Disorders, volume 26, number 4, ISSN 1573-3432, pages 389-406:
- Analysis of Wechsler IQ test scores for high-functioning autistic children and adults with Verbal and Full Scale IQ≥70 only partially supports previous contentions about the presence of a distinct profile of scores in autism.
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Derived terms
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