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  1. What Is Stimming? - Cleveland Clinic Health Essentials

    May 25, 2023 · Stimming, or self-stimulatory behaviors, are often a way of self-regulating or coping with emotions. It’s associated with autism and ADHD, but anyone can stim.

  2. Stimming - Wikipedia

    Stimming behaviors can consist of tactile, visual, auditory, vocal, proprioceptive (which pertains to limb sensing), olfactory, and vestibular stimming (which pertains to balance).

  3. What Is Stimming and What Does It Have to Do With Autism? - WebMD

    Jan 24, 2026 · Stimming refers to repetitive behaviors or movements that you may use to help cope with emotions. One example of a stim is twirling your hair when you feel bored.

  4. Stimming: Why It Happens and How to Manage It - Healthline

    Sep 2, 2025 · "Stimming" refers to self-stimulating behaviors, usually involving repetitive movements or sounds. Learn more about this and how it relates to autism.

  5. Stimming - Psychology Today

    The term “stimming,” short for self-stimulating behaviors, refers to repetitive or ritualistic movements or sounds that help an individual self-soothe when stressed or otherwise cope with their...

  6. STIMMING Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

    Stimming helps us process the sensory input we're gathering, stay calm and grounded in an overwhelming universe, and express joy, distress, or whatever we might be feeling.

  7. What Is Stimming? Meaning, Examples, and When to Pay Attention

    Aug 28, 2025 · Perhaps they vocalize and make the same sound or sound patterns over and over again. These behaviors have a name: stimming. The term stimming is shorthand for self-stimulatory …

  8. What Is Stimming? - UPMC HealthBeat

    Mar 7, 2025 · Stimming is when people engage in self-soothing behaviors like fidgeting, rocking, or humming. Though most stim, it's more common in those with autism and ADHD.

  9. Repeated movements and behaviour (stimming) - National Autistic …

    Stimming is short for ‘self-stimulating behaviour’; it can also be described as ‘self-regulating’ behaviour. Autistic people may also describe a single way of stimming as a ‘stim’, and a set as ‘stims’.

  10. STIMMING | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary

    Stimming refers to repetitive, self-stimulating or soothing behaviour such as hand-flapping or rocking that autistic children sometimes do in reaction to light, sounds, or excitement.