• Welcome to Autism Forums, a friendly forum to discuss Aspergers Syndrome, Autism, High Functioning Autism and related conditions.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Private Member only forums for more serious discussions that you may wish to not have guests or search engines access to.
    • Your very own blog. Write about anything you like on your own individual blog.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon! Please also check us out @ https://www.twitter.com/aspiescentral

People with autism 'have greater quality of creative ideas'

AGXStarseed

Well-Known Member
(not written by me)



Autistic traits may be socially disabling but are also linked to original thought and creativity, research has shown.

Scientists found that when asked to provide solutions to a problem, people with autism delivered fewer of them - but were more likely to think "outside the box".

The findings highlight an apparent paradox associated with the developmental disorder, which impairs the ability to socialise and form relationships.

Even though autism is often linked to narrow interests and a poor grasp of abstract concepts, some well known sufferers are highly creative.

They include TV garden designer Alan Gardner - aka The Autistic Gardener - British architectural artist Stephen Wiltshire, and American author and professor of animal science Temple Grandin.

Dr Martin Doherty, from the University of East Anglia, said: "People with high autistic traits could be said to have less quantity but greater quality of creative ideas.

"They are typically considered to be more rigid in their thinking, so the fact that the ideas they have are more unusual or rare is surprising.

"This difference may have positive implications for creative problem solving."

The creativity tests used in the research included asking the 312 participants to provide as many alternative uses they could think of for a brick or paper clip.

Volunteers were also given four abstract drawings and told to provide as many interpretations as possible for each figure in one minute.

In the first test, participants who came up with four or more unusual responses were found to have higher levels of autistic traits.

Among the creative uses for a paper clip suggested were a weight on a paper aeroplane, a wire to support cut flowers, a counter or token for gambling or playing a game, and a light duty spring.

More common alternative uses included a hook or pin, a tool for cleaning small grooves, and an item of jewellery.

Previous studies have shown that most people asked to solve problems use simple strategies, such as word association, to find obvious answers first.

Only when these sources of inspiration are exhausted do they shift up a mental gear and become creative.

The new research suggests that highly autistic people go straight for the more demanding option.

"People with autistic traits may approach creativity problems in a different way," Dr Doherty said.

"They might not run through things in the same way as someone without these traits would to get the typical ideas, but go directly to less common ones.

"In other words, the associative or memory-based route to being able to think of different ideas is impaired, whereas the specific ability to produce unusual responses is relatively unimpaired or superior."

The drawing tests, which assessed abstract thinking, associated a higher number of interpretations with a lower level of autism.

Co-author Dr Catherine Best, from the University of Stirling in Scotland, said: "This is the first study to find a link between autistic traits and the creative thinking processes.

"It goes a little way towards explaining how it is that some people with what is often characterised as a 'disability' exhibit superior creative talents in some domains."

The findings are published in the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders.


SOURCE: http://www.aol.co.uk/2015/08/14/people-with-autism-have-greater-quality-of-creative-ideas/
 
I find myself having a lot of these thoughts but the neurotypical world is very marginalizing so I have difficulty sharing these thoughts.
 
I've had so many unconventional ideas in my life, that I've forgotten many of them. I'm a wealth of them, since I was very young. Ascribed them to having an artistic frame of mind.
 
So basically this is just telling us our brain works differently?

I actually find this "study" slightly offensive like we're all the same and we don't think the same way.

I'm guessing if they replaced word autistic in this study and used a specific race it would be considered racist but because it's a study based on people who are supposedly not normal it's alright?
 
I find this study to be flattering. Civilization has been blessed by the inability of creative odd balls to see things the way others tell them they should. If it is "normal" to be obtuse, prejudice, irritated by the lack in someone else but not yourself, and altogether incapable of looking beyond the familiar, I'm glad I'm an Aspie. If only we had a Temple Grandin for enriching organizational ventures with the power of Aspie creativity. Really, all we need is respect for the things we do well.
 
In many ways, unconventional thinking has been soothing to me. Does the study consider unconventional thinking to be our special interests?
 
I just on my autistic YouTube creator channel "Aspie With Attitude" did a documentary how it's suggested that the post impressionist artist Van Gogh was autistic.


Please watch this video as I mention the evidence why it's suggested that Van Gogh was autistic and please feel free to leave a comment on on the board.

If you have your YouTube account active and handy, please also leave a comment below of my video. Please also like my video and maybe why not subscribe to "Aspie With Attitude".

I've given you the information in my video.
 
We'll never really know for sure. Much like so many historical figures who may or may not have been on the spectrum. Though admittedly it makes for an interesting subject.
 
Last edited:
We can only assume since we cannot diagnose those who passed away but I have heard about this topic before about Van Gogh and though we will never know for certain there could been a good chance he was, I also believe he may have had comorbid mental health conditions to go along with being on the spectrum maybe due to him being born in a era where Aspergers or autism wasn’t known and because of that it contributed to him developing other issues aswell.
 
He certainly suffered from some sort of cognitive issues. Hard to tell what happened but Absinthe is a helluva drug and Syphillis rots your brain.
 
Short story:

Moved to a new school when I started 5th grade which had a large cafeteria where paintings
were hung all around the walls of it.
I was fascinated by one, but, didn't know what it was.
One day I asked a teacher and told her how I was drawn to it.
She said it was Starry Night by Van Gogh.
Didn't know about him then, but, I started reading everything I could find about him and his works.
He has been my favourite artist since 10 years old.

To you Vincent!
 
I automatically despise the original post due to the word "sufferers". Please do not describe autistic people as autism sufferers or autism patients. And saying "with autism" drives me insane, too. How do we get that message through the thick skulls of these "experts"???:mad:

And i used to be pretty creative but I don't think I really am anymore. I used to draw and write stories a lot, but I don't do much of that anymore and it makes me worried and frustrated. I know I'll never be a writer or a cartoonist, anyway. No wonder my mom and other people were trying to force me to develop other interests when I was younger. They needed to crush my dreams because they knew they'd never come true.:(
 

New Threads

Top Bottom