Phenotype Explorer
About This Page
Explore 56 standardized phenotypes organized into 8 DSM-aligned categories. Each trait represents a clinical feature extracted from the literature using AI-assisted analysis. Click any trait to see associated genes in the side panel, or click "Details" to view the full trait report with cluster distributions and related traits.
Total Traits
56
Standardized phenotypes
Categories
8
DSM-aligned groupings
Present Observations
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Positive findings
Coverage
-
Traits with data
Phenotype Frequency
Number of Present observations per trait (click to filter)
What you're seeing: A ranked bar chart showing how often each phenotype is reported as "present" across all genes in the dataset.
Colors indicate the phenotype category.
What it means: More frequently reported phenotypes are either more common in ASD or more frequently studied. Click any bar to see which genes are associated with that trait.
What it means: More frequently reported phenotypes are either more common in ASD or more frequently studied. Click any bar to see which genes are associated with that trait.
Trait Connection Network
Traits connected through shared genes (edge thickness = genes in common, drag to explore)
What you're seeing: A network where each node is a trait and edges connect traits that share genes.
Thicker edges indicate more genes in common; node size reflects the number of connections.
What it means: Connected traits often co-occur in the same genes, suggesting related biological mechanisms or shared genetic architecture.
What it means: Connected traits often co-occur in the same genes, suggesting related biological mechanisms or shared genetic architecture.
Phenotype Details
What you're seeing: All 56 phenotype traits with their category, frequency of "Present" reports, and number of associated genes.
What it means: Click "Show Genes" to see which genes are associated with each trait. Higher gene counts indicate more broadly reported phenotypes.
What it means: Click "Show Genes" to see which genes are associated with each trait. Higher gene counts indicate more broadly reported phenotypes.
| Trait | Category | Present | Genes | Actions |
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Select a Trait
Click a trait to see associated genes