自闭症教育讲座对高中生对自闭症成人看法的影响。

Nichole E Scheerer, Troy Q Boucher, Noah J Sasson, Grace Iarocci
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:社交沟通障碍是自闭症的临床特征之一,但社交互动在本质上是互惠的,自闭症患者的社交能力可能不是影响其社交成功的唯一因素。非自闭症患者的社交观念和行为也会造成自闭症患者的社交障碍。以往的研究发现,非自闭症患者对自闭症患者的看法受到自闭症知识以及与自闭症患者接触的数量和质量的影响。本研究旨在考察高中生如何看待自闭症成人,评估自闭症接触的质量和数量是否会预测这些看法,并探讨这些看法是否具有可塑性:151 名高中生(15-19 岁)在观看了 20 名自闭症成人和 20 名非自闭症成人在社交场合的视频录像后,填写了第一印象量表,他们在观看之前或之后观看了一个 50 分钟的教育讲座,该讲座详细介绍了自闭症患者的日常经历,并参与了问答环节。我们使用 "接触的数量和质量量表 "评估了学生之前与自闭症患者接触的经历,并使用 "多维社交能力量表 "评估了他们自我认知的社交能力:与之前的研究一致,学生对自闭症成人的评价低于非自闭症成人。然而,教育演示对这些评价产生了适度但显著的改善,与尚未观看演示的学生相比,观看演示的学生认为自闭症成人更有吸引力、更讨人喜欢,并表示对他们有更大的社交兴趣。此外,与双重移情框架一致的是,探索性分析表明,学生自我报告的社交能力越强,对自闭症成人的偏见就越大,而报告与自闭症患者的互动质量越高,偏见就越小:以往的研究表明,与非自闭症对照组相比,非自闭症成人对自闭症患者的评价较差,对他们的社交兴趣也较低。在这项研究中,我们将这些发现延伸到了青少年身上,但发现这些偏见在一定程度上是可塑的,而自闭症教育也能带来一些适度的益处。改变非自闭症患者对自闭症差异的态度可能会为改善自闭症患者的互动提供一个途径,而不会让自闭症患者承担改变或掩饰其行为和身份的责任。
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Effects of an Educational Presentation About Autism on High School Students' Perceptions of Autistic Adults.

Background: Social communication difficulties are a clinical characteristic of autism, but social interactions are reciprocal in nature and autistic individuals' social abilities may not be the only factor influencing their social success. Nonautistic individuals' social perceptions and behavior also contribute to autistic individuals' social difficulties. Previous research has identified that nonautistic individuals' perception of autistic individuals is influenced by autism knowledge and the quantity and quality of exposure to autistic people. The current research aimed to examine how autistic adults are perceived by high school students, assess whether quality and quantity of autism contact predicts these perceptions, and explore whether these perceptions are malleable.

Methods: One hundred fifty-one senior high school students (15-19 years old) completed the First Impression Scale after viewing video recordings of 20 autistic and 20 nonautistic adults in social situations, either before or after viewing a 50-minute educational presentation detailing the everyday experiences of autistic people and participating in a question-and-answer session. We assessed students' prior experiences with autistic people using the Quantity and Quality of Contact Scale and their own self-perceived social competence using the Multidimensional Social Competence Scale.

Results: Consistent with previous studies, students rated autistic adults less favorably than nonautistic adults. However, the educational presentation produced modest but significant improvements on these ratings, with students who viewed the presentation rating autistic adults as more attractive and likable and reporting greater social interest in them compared to those who had not yet viewed the presentation. Furthermore, consistent with a double empathy framework, exploratory analyses indicated that self-reports of greater social competence among students was associated with greater bias against autistic adults, whereas reports of higher quality interactions with autistic people were associated with less bias.

Conclusion: Previous research has demonstrated that nonautistic adults evaluate autistic people less favorably and report lower social interest in them relative to nonautistic controls. In this study, we extend these findings to adolescents but find these biases are somewhat malleable, with education about autism exerting some modest benefits. Changing nonautistic attitudes about autistic differences may provide an avenue for improving interactions for autistic individuals without putting the onus on autistic individuals to change or mask their behavior and identity.

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