Situations that NTs and Aspies would perceive differently?
The title didn't fit my whole inquiry, so I will post it here.
I am wondering if there is some simulation, game, situation, or whatever on the internet or somewhere else that has to be solved, looked at or whatever, and NTs and Aspies would do it differently. I realize this might sound a bit muddled, but as an example, there was this video posted on these forums recently where shapes moved around and NTs and Aspies would maybe view it differently. I'm wondering if there is something with a similar aim (not necessarily similar execution). Maybe a text or problem or whatever that an average NT would solve differently from an average Aspie?
I've never come across such a thing, but then I don't spend a lot of time looking.
The concept of 'average' - whether applied to aspies or to NTs - is a bit daunting too.
The principal differences I'd expect could be found between the two groups, none of which are easy to track in an online function, are in eye movements and time to response. The latter, principally in expression changes in response to stimuli. By the time you've added languaging and response to verbal questions to the mix, you've lost the point of difference.
Oh yes, there are the responses themselves. Forgot about those. Sorry...
Good luck, though. Keep us informed.
Then there's this:
Free cup case
The autistic brain picks out the smaller letters first, while the NT brain will process the bigger letters first. You can see the bigger letters, but you need to think about it more. It's a Gestalt grouping.
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Then there's this:
Free cup case
The autistic brain picks out the smaller letters first, while the NT brain will process the bigger letters first. You can see the bigger letters, but you need to think about it more. It's a Gestalt grouping.
I said no to both, to the cup case, meh, I've messed it up as I read the conclusion first and I think I have picked up smaller letters first. At first, the big ones didn't seem letters to me, just random figures made of letters.
I actually highly doubt my Aspieness, but this...
To me is happened a strange thing:
First letter i noticed is H, second S, third L, fourth L, five S, sixth both.
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Interesting with the different-sized letters. I definitely saw the small ones before I even noticed that there were big ones.
I've read about that test before, but have only seen it in contexts that explain it and since I saw it right after its explanation I couldn't tell what my natural reaction to it was. But this time I saw the test without thinking what it was about first, and I definitely saw the small letters before I saw the big ones.
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Now convinced that I'm a bit autistic, but still unsure if I'd qualify for a diagnosis, since it causes me few problems. Apparently people who are familiar with the autism spectrum can readily spot that I'm a bit autistic, though.
The OP question is something I've pondered too since getting into all this - such a method of assessment - rather than relying on professional opinions of idiots - would make me a lot happier about the whole thing.
As soon as I saw the picture I thought oh - shapes made up of letters - but deliberately turned away from it to read the whole thing from top - I answered no to both lottery questions - and had read it thru a few times before I got what it was all about - wierd - then when i looked again at the picture I realised the shapes were very letter like too but couldn't figure out what overall picture it was meant to be - in the end I gave up and read the description.
Another tick in the box for me too it would seem.
My first reaction from those vignettes was "well how am I supposed to know? I don't know this guy and I don't know how much he values his dollar." He used the statement "I don't care," so I associated that statement with an unintentional action. It seems to make sense. If you don't care about paying more money, then chances are the action wasn't intentional. I think what it comes down to is how much you assume the guy values the dollar. This was something I got from that word document:
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Then there's this:
Free cup case
The autistic brain picks out the smaller letters first, while the NT brain will process the bigger letters first. You can see the bigger letters, but you need to think about it more. It's a Gestalt grouping.
Hmm, not intentional to both of the free cup scenarios.
I see the smaller letters easily but the larger letters take more effort.
I'm pretty impulsive, so I might buy the lottery tickets.
I didn't realise the free cup thing was a link - was wondering what people were talking about. I just took a look and my first reaction is that he made it clear it didn't matter what it cost - the extra dollar didn't matter as far as getting the drink so no it wasn't intentional - just consequential - indeed just as getting the special cup in the first example was simply a consequence of getting the biggest drink.
Thinking about it for a little while I CAN see how knowing that's what it would probably cost and going ahead with getting the drink could be described as intentionally paying (it's not exactly voluntary tho) - so I guess I'd have to answer YES.
Still makes no sense. Do they explain what they mean by "instrumental desire" in ordinary English? The question seems dependent on how you choose to define "intent" in both cases.
Thinking about it for a little while I CAN see how knowing that's what it would probably cost and going ahead with getting the drink could be described as intentionally paying (it's not exactly voluntary tho) - so I guess I'd have to answer YES.
I still don't see how the second case is any more intentional. It's not like they were offering the largest size without having to pay the extra dollar in which case he would be intentionally stupid. But clearly he was so thirsty that the lack of desire to pay an extra dollar was inconsequential in comparison to his desire to quench his thirst.
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