Ados 2 Manual May 2026

She flipped to the scoring algorithm. A “2” in Reciprocal Social Interaction meant notable impairment. A “3” in Quality of Social Overtures meant the child might approach, but oddly—too close, too loud, or without the usual rhythm of greeting. Lena traced the codes with her finger, remembering a boy last year who had scored high on everything. His mother had wept. Lena had held the manual in her lap like a shield, wishing it could say something softer than “meets threshold.”

The manual had no code for that.

But then she reached the last section: Creativity and Imagination. Leo had transformed a doll into a monarch, a bubble into a courtier, a therapist into a queen. The manual allowed a “0” here—typical imagination. She hesitated. Imagination wasn’t the same as social reciprocity. Ados 2 Manual

“More?” Lena prompted. Neutral tone. No extra cues. She flipped to the scoring algorithm

She wrote: Leo meets ADOS-2 criteria for autism spectrum disorder in the domain of social communication. However, his imaginative play and capacity for metaphor suggest a rich inner world. Recommendation: support social navigation without extinguishing his narrative gifts. Lena traced the codes with her finger, remembering

She led Leo to the room with the bubbles, the small figures, the picture book about a frog. The manual said: Present the bubbles. Wait for the child to request more. Leo didn’t ask. He just watched the bubbles rise, then popped each one with a fingertip, smiling slightly.