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NIMH Science Updates – Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) logo

NIMH Science Updates – Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)


Description

A curated, regularly updated collection of science news, research highlights, and institute announcements specifically focused on Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), published by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), a U.S. government agency.

Market positioning

Leading authoritative government resource for autism research updates in the United States, widely trusted by professionals and the public.

Target audience

Researchers, clinicians, caregivers, patients, and the general public seeking up-to-date scientific information and research findings on Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Use cases

Provides a centralized, regularly updated hub for ASD-related science news, research highlights, clinical trial links, and educational materials — serving as a go-to reference for anyone seeking credible, government-backed information on Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Company information

Company size

U.S. Federal Government Agency (part of NIH/HHS)

Revenue

Government-funded (non-revenue generating); NIH annual budget ~$47 billion

Scale

National (United States), with global reach via open internet access

Number of users

Millions of annual visitors (NIMH website receives 30M+ visits/year across all topics)

Features

Brochures and fact sheets available for download; Curated ASD-specific science updates and research highlights; Filtering by health topic, population, and research category; Filtering by year (2023, 2024, 2025, 2026); Free access to all content; Links to related clinical trials on clinicaltrials.gov; Multilingual support (Spanish available); Multimedia content including videos and podcasts; Official government-backed and expert-reviewed information; Regular updates tied to new NIH-funded research

Pricing

Pricing modelFreemium (fully free; all content publicly accessible at no cost)
Starting price$0 (Free)
Billing periodN/A (no billing; government-funded public resource)

Pros and cons

Based on: (AI summary)

Pros

  • Authoritative and trustworthy source (U.S. government / NIH-backed)
  • Expert-reviewed and scientifically rigorous content
  • Regularly updated with new research highlights
  • Free and publicly accessible
  • Broad coverage of ASD topics including research, clinical trials, and policy

Cons

  • Content is not personalized or tailored to individual user needs
  • No search-based article recommendation engine
  • Some content may not be updated regularly due to HHS/NIH restructuring (as noted on the page)
  • Primarily focused on U.S.-centric research and policy
  • No AI-driven or automated article discovery features

Feature Comparison

Top features across 9 competitors (most common first)

Feature Google Scho…NIMH Scienc…Autism Rese…Autism Rese…CDC Autism …Nature Ment…ResearchGat…Autism Pare…OARacle New…
Access to peer-reviewed papers
theses
books
and abstracts; Author profiles; Citation tracking; Coverage of preprint archives and conference proceedings; Gray literature access; Institutional repository indexing; Links to academic library online collections; Simple intuitive search interface (single query box)
Brochures and fact sheets available for download; Curated ASD-specific science updates and research highlights; Filtering by health topic
population
and research category; Filtering by year (2023
2024
2025
2026); Free access to all content; Links to related clinical trials on clinicaltrials.gov; Multilingual support (Spanish available); Multimedia content including videos and podcasts; Official government-backed and expert-reviewed information; Regular updates tied to new NIH-funded research
12 issues per year in electronic format; 984
089 full-text article downloads in 2025; Autism 101 instructional series for foundational autism topics; Coverage of epidemiology
treatment studies
genetics
and neurobiology; Free subscription included with INSAR membership; Full-color illustrations support; International editorial board ensuring fair and comprehensive evaluation; Lay abstracts freely accessible to the public; Publishes original research articles
brief reports
review articles
and commentaries on autism; Rapid decision and publication times (median 34 days to first decision)
Assessment tools (ATEC)
Coverage of a wide range of autism-related research topics