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:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon! Please also check us out @ https://www.twitter.com/aspiescentral
That is actually how TOM has always been described to me--the sense that others' minds are the same as your own. It's only when it's done in an autistic way that it's defined as a pathology. Maybe there are other definitions out there.Hmmm, just thinking...
In ToM tests, they conclude that aspies project their thoughts onto other people – I know it, therefore you know it.
I wonder if its the same with NTs with emotion – I feel it, therefore you feel it. Maybe that is what they call empathy?
The scientists didn't say, "Great, now we can work out how to train (NT) children to understand that computer graphics don't actuaaly have an experience of itself, other graphics, or anything at all." That's where it says that.
I think you misunderstood my point. My point wasn't that autistic kids would have had the different results, it's that I feel the "findings" of this study are really interpretations based on the researcher's prior views.But they wouldn't, autistic kids lack pretend play. I didn't have my toys act like people, I just lined them up and sorted them into groups. I imagine it's the same that goes into making little triangles into people.
That's an interesting question. I don't have much experience with people on the spectrum in real life, and I can't really answer this... but one lady who claimed to be on the spectrum and who had an autistic daughter I met seemed to know what I might be feeling. Many NT people find it strange that I can't just go up to a person and start talking to them, or that I don't know what to say, that talking to people makes me anxious and tired, or that I don't like talking on the phone, but another person on the spectrum might understand these things and feel the same way. NTs often think that I overreact to things, people on the spectrum are perhaps more likely to understand and pick up on my emotions... but I don't really know, I haven't had a lot of contact with people on the spectrum in real life.Can we read each other, though? I know NTs cannot read us, but if it is an intraneurology thing, that would be useful information.