A Sunday Mornings field note on two new GLP papers, Cathy’s absence, Towcester Abbey’s first research brief, and the slow work of moving from recognition to evidence without letting the measure destroy the meaning.
This morning’s recording is a progress report from the middle of the work—not the triumphant end of a research arc, not the clean announcement of something finished, but the quieter, more demanding moment when a pattern begins to take institutional form. I talk through two new papers: What Counts as Evidence for Gestalt Language Processing? and Hidden in the Criteria, both of which ask what happens when autistic language has been observed for decades but interpreted through measures built around analytic expectations of development.
Hoerricks, J. (2026). What Counts as Evidence for Gestalt Language Processing? A Methodological Review of Measurement, Construct Validity, and Epistemic Exclusion in Autism and Language Research. J Clin Neuropsychol Prac 1: 1-12. https://skgpublishers.com/assets/article-pdf/what-counts-as-evidence-for-gestalt-language-processing-a-methodological-review-of-measurement-construct-validity-and-epistemic-exclusion-in-autism-and-language-research.pdf
Hoerricks, J. (2026). Hidden in the criteria: re-reading autism measures for evidence of Gestalt Language Processing. In Towcester Abbey Research Brief / Occasional Paper Series (Version 1.0, pp. 1–3). Towcester Abbey. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.21281975
Cathy is absent from this one, and I feel that absence in the room. Sunday Mornings usually has the steadiness of her presence beside the conversation—her questions, her laughter, her way of holding the thread when I move too quickly into the whole of it. Without that anchoring, this episode becomes a more solitary kind of Field Note: one voice trying to keep the shape intact whilst missing the person who usually helps the shape breathe.
The talk moves from Ann Peters, Barry Prizant, and Marge Blanc—the lineage of noticing, describing, and working with gestalt language processors—toward the slower question of validation. I can notice a pattern. Many of us can. But proving a pattern is different. Research has to move carefully from recognition to construct development, from construct development to proxy evidence, from proxy evidence to direct study, and eventually, perhaps, toward a validated way of identifying gestalt processing architecture without flattening it into another deficit score.
I also speak about the next step from the IRB proposal, without giving too much away: a cautious secondary analysis asking whether existing autism measures may already contain GLP-relevant signals hidden under other names. Echolalia, scripting, delayed response, literal interpretation, pragmatic timing, developmental delay—these may have been recorded as isolated impairments when, in constellation, they may point toward a coherent language architecture the field has not yet learned to see.
The recording also marks a shift for Towcester Abbey. With Hidden in the Criteria, the Abbey has taken its first public step as a publisher of record, creating another path for serious autistic-led, practitioner-aware, methodologically careful work that may not fit easily through existing journal gates. This is not a replacement for peer review or scholarly discipline. It is a widening of the archive.
So this episode is about evidence, but also about patience. It is about the distance between knowing and proving, between field recognition and validated measurement, between the pattern that arrives whole and the slow work of giving that pattern enough structure to be studied without being destroyed. Meaning sometimes arrives before the measure is ready. The task now is to build better measures.
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