I found an alternative solution and have now watched it:
Share..... May work for the Americans and street
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I found an alternative solution and have now watched it:
I'll share via PM if anyone is interested.Share..... May work for the Americans and street
I searched for the programme because I was interested in watching it too and found it on YouTube.
Here's the video for anyone who's interested:
Where's my sandwich?Thank you, Nightingale121, the curiosity was killing me. But now I can chime in and say "meh." The show was unfocused. Both useless to those who knew nothing (and still know next to nothing) about the spectrum, and pathetically useless to those of us who do. I felt like I just watched a trailer, of a commercial, for an infomercial,.... but it took over 45 minutes.
In the bin with the rest of them!Where's my sandwich?
Yes, people living in the UK can legally watch it by using this link on 4OD for the next 27 days at the time of writing even without a TV licence because it's not live TV and it's not BBC iPlayer which now requires one due to a change in the law. You will be forced to turn off any Ad blockers however and watch the boring adverts which I suppose is what funds the making of their programmes in the first place. Sorry our friends in the USA and other countries will most probably be blocked from watching it using your usual Internet connection.
PS: The video above on Youtube added by @Nightingale121 was later blocked on copyright grounds, at least in the UK anyway, I'm not certain about other countries.
It comes up "The video contains content from Channel 4, who has blocked it in your country on copyright grounds." when you try to play the Youtube video in the UK. They must want people in the UK to watch it on the official Channel 4 website instead along with all the unskippable boring Ad breaks that are mainly targeted towards UK viewers.I'm in the U.S. and it still works here!
Also, I wonder if that sound test is available anywhere online?
Thank you.Don't think Remington has made an online version of the test. Her paper reporting the experiment is available at A sound advantage: Increased auditory capacity in autism - ScienceDirect (I think this is open access). She also wrote a lay language account for The Conversation which simplifies things somewhat: Autistic people can hear more than most – which can be a strength and a challenge
I like Remington's work because she's one of the few researchers who is interested in exploring autistic superiority.