Autism Spectrum Quotient, Brief (AQ-10)
The AQ-10 is a brief 10-item autism trait screener developed as a shortened version of the full 50-item Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ). Its purpose is rapid identification of individuals who may benefit from a full autism assessment. Each item reflects a high-discriminating question drawn from the original AQ domains: Social Skills, Communication, Attention Switching, Attention to Detail, and Imagination. Scores range from 0–10, with 6 or more recommended by NICE as the threshold for referral for a comprehensive autism assessment. The AQ-10 is not a diagnostic tool but serves as an efficient “red flag” screener suitable for busy clinical environments.
- At intake when autism is part of the presenting concern
- Once, unless a reassessment is clinically relevant
- Repeat only if self-awareness, symptoms, or masking patterns have meaningfully changed
- Not intended for routine monitoring
AQ-10 Score Interpreter
Score meets the ≥6 threshold associated with referral for a comprehensive autism assessment. A positive screen does not confirm an autism spectrum condition.
10 self-report items, scored 0–1 each. Total score 0–10; higher scores reflect more autistic traits. Validated cut-point ≥6 for referral consideration in adults.
| Total score | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| 6+ | Positive screenScore meets the ≥6 threshold associated with referral for a comprehensive autism assessment. A positive screen does not confirm an autism spectrum condition. |
| 0–5 | Below thresholdScore is below the ≥6 referral threshold. A low score does not rule out autism spectrum condition, particularly in individuals who mask or camouflage autistic traits. |
Allison C et al. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2012;51(2):202-212.e7. Cut-point per validated criterion from that study. Educational reference only — not a diagnostic tool.
Foundational Context
The AQ-10 was developed by Allison, Auyeung, and Baron-Cohen (2012) through large-scale item-reduction analysis of the full AQ. Researchers identified the 10 questions with the strongest statistical discrimination between autistic and non-autistic adults. The tool targets adults with average or above-average intelligence and is intended for quick initial screening in primary care, mental health, and specialist referral pathways.
Despite its brevity, the AQ-10 retains strong predictive validity when applied for its intended purpose: deciding whether a referral for full autism assessment is warranted. It is widely used in clinical triage, neurodevelopmental services, and research settings where a rapid screen is required.
What the Assessment Measures
The AQ-10 measures core autistic traits, capturing difficulties or differences in:
- Social intuition and comfort
- Flexibility and attention switching
- Literal or detail-oriented thinking
- Communication and conversational nuance
- Imagination and perspective-taking
These items reflect the same cognitive–behavioural constructs as the 50-item AQ but in highly condensed form.
Interpretation Guidelines
The AQ-10 produces a single total score from 0 to 10.
Standard interpretation (aligned with NICE):
- 0–5: Below screening threshold
- ≥6: Positive screen; consider referral for comprehensive autism assessment
Interpretation Notes:
- A positive screen does not indicate autism; it signals that further evaluation may be appropriate
- A score below 6 does not rule out autism, especially in individuals who mask or compensate socially
- Cultural, linguistic, gendered, and neurodivergent presentation differences influence responses
- Should be reviewed alongside developmental history, functioning, sensory profile, and clinical interview data
Psychometric Properties
Reliability
- Good internal consistency for a very brief screener
- Strong item-level discrimination based on large normative and clinical samples
Validity
- High predictive validity for identifying individuals likely to meet autism criteria
- Strong correlation with full AQ scores in research samples
- Designed specifically to maximize referral accuracy, not diagnosis
Administration Considerations
- Ideal for primary care, community mental health, and diagnostic triage
- Best used early in assessment workflows
- Responses may be influenced by masking/camouflaging, anxiety, or social learning
- Not validated for individuals with intellectual disability or limited literacy
- Works well in combination with AQ-50, RAADS-R, or developmental history tools
Limitations
- Not diagnostic; cannot determine autism on its own
- Does not capture sensory experiences, camouflaging, burnout, or female-presenting autism profiles
- Binary scoring may oversimplify nuanced traits
- Very brief, can miss subtle presentations
References
- 1.Allison C, Auyeung B, Baron-Cohen S. Toward brief "Red Flags" for autism screening: the Short Autism Spectrum Quotient and the Short Quantitative Checklist for Autism in toddlers in 1,000 cases and 3,000 controls. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2012;51(2):202-212.e7.View source
- 2.Baron-Cohen S, Wheelwright S, Skinner R, Martin J, Clubley E. The autism-spectrum quotient (AQ): evidence from autism spectrum conditions, males and females, scientists and mathematicians. J Autism Dev Disord. 2001;31(1):5-17.View source
- 3.Sizoo BB, Horwitz EH, Teunisse JP, et al. Predictive validity of self-report questionnaires in the assessment of autism spectrum disorders in adults. Autism. 2015;19(7):842-849.View source
Frequently Asked Questions
How is the AQ-10 scored?
Each of the 10 items is scored 0 or 1 based on the direction of the response. Scores consistent with autistic traits receive 1 point; all other responses score 0. The total score ranges from 0 to 10, with higher scores indicating a greater number of autistic traits endorsed.
What score on the AQ-10 suggests a referral for further assessment?
A score of 6 or above is the recommended threshold, established in the 2012 validation study by Allison, Auyeung, and Baron-Cohen. At this cut-point the adult version showed sensitivity of 0.88 and specificity of 0.91. A positive screen indicates that a comprehensive autism assessment may be appropriate, not that autism is present.
Is the AQ-10 a self-report tool or clinician-administered?
The AQ-10 is a self-report questionnaire. Individuals complete it themselves, typically in a few minutes. It does not require clinician administration, making it well suited to initial triage in primary care, mental health intake, or referral pathways.
Can the AQ-10 diagnose autism spectrum condition?
No. The AQ-10 is a screening tool only and cannot provide a diagnosis. A positive screen identifies individuals who may benefit from a full multidisciplinary autism assessment; it does not confirm or rule out an autism spectrum condition on its own.
Related Assessments
Explore complementary clinical tools and screeners