You might have seen the social media videos: the "five signs you're autistic". You may have heard about long waiting lists for autism diagnosis. You might know, or sense, that the numbers of people deemed autistic are going up, fast.
There's a lot at stake. These numbers mean fiercely different things to different people. To some, autism is a fear (what if this happens to my child?); to others it's an identity, maybe even a superpower.
So what's the truth about the number of autistic people - and what does it mean?
To count something, you first need to say what it is you're counting.
For someone to be diagnosed with autism, they need to have "persistent difficulties in social life and in social communication," says Ginny Russell, an associate professor in psychiatry at University College London (UCL) and the author of The Rise of Autism. She's using the criteria for autism from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, known as the DSM.
She says examples of this behaviour can range from a lack of turn-taking in conversation to being completely non-verbal.
Restricted interests and repetitive behaviours are part of a second group of traits required to meet the criteria, she says. So things like "hand flapping or rocking or skin picking, but also sticking to repeated routines, like eating the same food every day."