I don't know anything about Massie's work, but did a little googling to see 
what was out there. From what I found, it seems that Massie isn't taking as 
strong a stance as Joan Warmbold suggests regarding the question of whether 
parents are contributing to the disorder or simply picking up on early cues 
from the child. This quote is from the web page on which Massie is selling his 
video, so I assume it was written (or at least approved) by him:

By the 1970’s, a sufficient number of families had made home movies of their 
children so that there existed a small number of family-made home movies of the 
infancies of children who were later diagnosed with autism.
Our project collected a series of these movies and analyzed them for 1) 
Children’s first signs of atypical behavior in the first six months of life, 
and 2) Failure of social relatedness and cognitive growth in the second half of 
the first year through the third year of life.
Findings point to the presence of a prodromal autistic syndrome prior to 
established autism. The presence of pre-autistic symptoms indicates the 
importance of beginning treatment as early as possible, in the first three 
years of life.
To this end, the presentation also discusses components of treatment approaches 
that have normalized the children so that they no longer meet criteria for 
autistic spectrum disorders.


________________________________________
From: [email protected] [[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, February 08, 2009 12:07 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re: [tips] Massie and autism

As Allen noted, it seems more plausible that the parents in Massie's
study are reacting to subtle signs of autism in their children rather
than creating them.  It's also possible that it is genes that are
responsible both for the autism of the children and the claimed
unresponsive behaviour of the parents. Admittedly, Massie's proposal is
kinder than Bettelheim's pernicious pseudoscience, but it still lays a
heavy load on the parents. It's best to be careful with such claims.

Stephen
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