Read The Autistic Brain: Thinking Across the Spectrum Online

Authors: Temple Grandin,Richard Panek

Tags: #Non-Fiction

The Autistic Brain: Thinking Across the Spectrum (28 page)

BOOK: The Autistic Brain: Thinking Across the Spectrum
13.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

John is 29 now and recently engaged. He and his fiancée plan to leave New York for “somewhere where the money I get goes further.” Don’t worry, though, about whether he can find another job that’s such a great match. “I have permission from work to telecommute permanently.”

 

We’ve come a long way from the days of doctors telling the parents of autistic children that the situation was hopeless and that the only humane option was a life sentence in an institution.

We have a lot farther to go, of course. Ignorance and misunderstanding are always difficult to overcome when they’ve become part of a society’s belief system. For instance, when the movie
The Social Network
came out, in 2010, the
New York Times
op-ed columnist David Brooks wrote this assessment of the onscreen character of Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook: “It’s not that he’s a bad person. He’s just never been house-trained.” The “training” of the fictional character, however, would have had to somehow accommodate a brain that can’t process facial and gestural cues that most people easily assimilate and that finds its greatest fulfillment not in the fizzy buzz of forming a personal relationship but in the click-clack logic of writing code.

When something is “all in your mind,” people tend to think that it’s willful, that it’s something you could control if only you tried harder or if you had been trained differently. I’m hoping that the newfound certainty that autism is in your brain and in your genes will affect public attitudes.

As we’ve seen, it’s already affecting research, prompting scientists to redouble efforts to look for cause and cure. And it’s already affecting therapeutic attitudes, shifting the emphasis from a sole focus on deficits to a broader appreciation of strengths.

When I look back on where autism was sixty years ago, when my autistic brain was creating great anxiety in Mother, curiosity in doctors, and a challenge to my nanny and teachers, I know that trying to imagine where we’ll be sixty years from now is a fool’s errand. But I have confidence that whatever the thinking about autism is, it will incorporate a need to consider it brain by brain, DNA strand by DNA strand, trait by trait, strength by strength, and, maybe most important of all, individual by individual.

 

Jobs for Picture Thinkers

 

  • Architectural and engineering drafter
  • Photographer
  • Animal trainer
  • Graphic artist
  • Jewelry/crafts designer
  • Web designer
  • Veterinary technician
  • Auto mechanic
  • Machine maintenance technician
  • Computer troubleshooter
  • Theater lighting director
  • Industrial automation designer
  • Landscape designer
  • Biology teacher
  • Satellite map analyst
  • Plumber
  • Heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning technician
  • Photocopier repair technician
  • Audio/visual equipment technician
  • Welder
  • Plant engineer
  • Radiological technician
  • Medical-equipment repair technician
  • Industrial designer
  • Computer animator

 

Jobs for Word-Fact Thinkers

 

  • Journalist
  • Translator
  • Specialty retailer (that is, a worker in a store that sells only one kind of product)
  • Librarian
  • Stocks and bonds analyst
  • Copyeditor
  • Accountant
  • Budget analyst
  • Bookkeeper and record-keeper
  • Special-education teacher
  • Book indexer
  • Speech therapist
  • Inventory-control specialist
  • Legal researcher
  • Contract specialist for auto dealership
  • Historian
  • Technical writer
  • Bank teller
  • Tour guide
  • Person at an information counter

 

Jobs for Pattern Thinkers

 

  • Computer programmer
  • Engineer
  • Physicist
  • Musician/composer
  • Statistician
  • Math teacher
  • Chemist
  • Electronics technician
  • Music teacher
  • Scientific researcher
  • Mathematical data mining analyst
  • Stock and financial investing analyst
  • Actuary
  • Electrician
Appendix: The AQ Test

PSYCHOLOGIST SIMON BARON-COHEN and his colleagues at Cambridge’s Autism Research Centre have created the Autism-Spectrum Quotient, or AQ, as a measure of the extent of autistic traits in adults. In the first major trial using the test, the average score in the control group was 16.4. Eighty percent of those diagnosed with autism or a related disorder scored 32 or higher. The test is not a means for making a diagnosis, however, and many who score above 32 and even meet the diagnostic criteria for mild autism or Asperger’s report no difficulty functioning in their everyday lives.

 

 

1. I prefer to do things with others rather than on my own.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

2. I prefer to do things the same way over and over again.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

3. If I try to imagine something, I find it very easy to create a picture in my mind.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

4. I frequently get so strongly absorbed in one thing that I lose sight of other things.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

5. I often notice small sounds when others do not.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

6. I usually notice car number plates or similar strings of information.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

7. Other people frequently tell me that what I’ve said is impolite, even though I think it is polite.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

8. When I’m reading a story, I can easily imagine what the characters might look like.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

9. I am fascinated by dates.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

10 In a social group, I can easily keep track of several different people’s conversations.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

11. I find social situations easy.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

12. I tend to notice details that others do not.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

13. I would rather go to a library than to a party.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

14. I find making up stories easy.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

15. I find myself drawn more strongly to people than to things.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

16. I tend to have very strong interests, which I get upset about if I can’t pursue.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

17. I enjoy social chitchat.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

18. When I talk, it isn’t always easy for others to get a word in edgewise.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

19. I am fascinated by numbers.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

20. When I’m reading a story, I find it difficult to work out the characters’ intentions.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

21. I don’t particularly enjoy reading fiction.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

22. I find it hard to make newfriends.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

23. I notice patterns in things all the time.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

24. I would rather go to the theater than to a museum.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

25. It does not upset me if my daily routine is disturbed.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

26. I frequently find that I don’t know how to keep a conversation going.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

27. I find it easy to “read between the lines” when someone is talking to me.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

28. I usually concentrate more on the whole picture, rather than on the small details.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

29. I am not very good at remembering phone numbers.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

30. I don’t usually notice small changes in a situation or a person’s appearance.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

31. I know how to tell if someone listening to me is getting bored.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

32. I find it easy to do more than one thing at once.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

33. When I talk on the phone, I’m not sure when it’s my turn to speak.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

34. I enjoy doing things spontaneously.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

35. I am often the last to understand the point of a joke.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

36. I find it easy to work out what someone is thinking or feeling just by looking at their face.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

37. If there is an interruption, I can switch back to what I was doing very quickly.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

38. I am good at social chitchat.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

39. People often tell me that I keep going on and on about the same thing.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

40. When I was young, I used to enjoy playing games involving pretending with other children.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

41. I like to collect information about categories of things (e.g., types of cars, birds, trains, plants).

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

42. I find it difficult to imagine what it would be like to be someone else.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

43. I like to carefully plan any activities I participate in.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

44. I enjoy social occasions.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

45. I find it difficult to work out people’s intentions.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

46. New situations make me anxious.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

47. I enjoy meeting new people.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

48. I am a good diplomat.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

49. I am not very good at remembering people’s date of birth.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

50. I find it very easy to play games with children that involve pretending.

Definitely agree
Slightly agree
Slightly disagree
Definitely disagree

 

© Simon Baron-Cohen

 

 

How to score:
“Definitely agree” or “Slightly agree” responses to questions 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 12, 13, 16, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 26, 33, 35, 39, 41, 42, 43, 45, and 46 score 1 point. “Definitely disagree” or “Slightly disagree” responses to questions 1, 3, 8, 10, 11, 14, 15, 17, 24, 25, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 34, 36, 37, 38, 40, 44, 47, 48, 49, and 50 score 1 point.

BOOK: The Autistic Brain: Thinking Across the Spectrum
13.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Sherry Sontag;Christopher Drew by Blind Man's Bluff: The Untold Story Of American Submarine Espionage
Chance of a Lifetime by Hill, Joey W., Byrd, Rhyannon
The Malacia Tapestry by Brian W. Aldiss
A Hero To Trust In Me by Marteeka Karland
A Surprise for Lily by Mary Ann Kinsinger
Judgment of the Grave by Sarah Stewart Taylor
Travels by Michael Crichton
Blood Sports by Eden Robinson