I'm reading a book at the moment, The Jumbled Jigsaw by Donna Williams. Williams was diagnosed with autism as an adult, and was non-verbal for the first nine years of her life.
In her book, she describes how she is 'mono-tracked', meaning that she can only process one of her senses at a time: if she is listening or speaking, her vision shuts down and she doesn't process what she sees. If she is looking, she can't see, if she is thinking, she can't hear or speak, etc. This is certainly true for me - if I'm speaking, thinking or listening, then I don't process any visual information. She also says that neurotypical people are able to "listen to someone and not only map the meaning of what the other person is saying but simultaneously keep track of their own thoughts and feelings about what is being said or that they are tired, hungry, need the toilet, or are in social or physical danger" (pg 85).
I have a couple of questions:
Can you multitrack (multitask) - when you listen, can you see at the same time? I asked a couple of people this (NTs) One said that they can, and another that they can't. Also, a mother once told me that her daughter can, but she can't.
Can NTs really multitask, as Williams suggests? I have seen people talking on the phone while at the same time reading or taking down information. There's no way I can do that. I get overloaded if I have stimulation needing my attention coming from two or more sources, literally my head hurts! I once heard that actually it isn't possible to multitask and when people multitask, that this is a myth and what they are actually doing is switching very quickly from one task to another. So perhaps the difficulty for people on the spectrum is that they find it hard to switch quickly from one task to another?
In her book, she describes how she is 'mono-tracked', meaning that she can only process one of her senses at a time: if she is listening or speaking, her vision shuts down and she doesn't process what she sees. If she is looking, she can't see, if she is thinking, she can't hear or speak, etc. This is certainly true for me - if I'm speaking, thinking or listening, then I don't process any visual information. She also says that neurotypical people are able to "listen to someone and not only map the meaning of what the other person is saying but simultaneously keep track of their own thoughts and feelings about what is being said or that they are tired, hungry, need the toilet, or are in social or physical danger" (pg 85).
I have a couple of questions:
Can you multitrack (multitask) - when you listen, can you see at the same time? I asked a couple of people this (NTs) One said that they can, and another that they can't. Also, a mother once told me that her daughter can, but she can't.
Can NTs really multitask, as Williams suggests? I have seen people talking on the phone while at the same time reading or taking down information. There's no way I can do that. I get overloaded if I have stimulation needing my attention coming from two or more sources, literally my head hurts! I once heard that actually it isn't possible to multitask and when people multitask, that this is a myth and what they are actually doing is switching very quickly from one task to another. So perhaps the difficulty for people on the spectrum is that they find it hard to switch quickly from one task to another?