自闭症患者与非自闭症患者在主观上存在差异,但在客观推理上却没有差异。

IF 5.2 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL Autism Pub Date : 2024-10-10 DOI:10.1177/13623613241277055
Elif Bastan, Sarah R Beck, Andrew Dr Surtees
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引用次数: 0

摘要

内容提要:自闭症患者在社交场合和需要快速做出决定时经常会遇到挑战。有证据表明,与非自闭症患者相比,自闭症患者更倾向于深思熟虑,而直觉则较低。因此,研究人员提出,自闭症与理性水平的提高有关。然而,这些理论大多是从非社会领域或社会领域的角度进行探讨的。为了填补这一空白,我们招募了自闭症成年人,并仔细地将他们与非自闭症成年人进行了配对对比。我们使用了一个在比较结构中同时代表社会和非社会互动的任务,并询问参与者对场景中主要人物的道德判断。同时还辅以主观和客观的推理测量。我们的研究结果并没有显示出不同群体之间在深思熟虑方面存在有意义的差异。不过,我们确实观察到,与非自闭症参与者相比,自闭症参与者自我报告的直觉水平较低。自闭症患者一直认为自己的直觉水平低于同龄人。然而,在不同的任务和研究中,支持这一观点的客观证据并不一致。
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Autistic people differ from non-autistic people subjectively, but not objectively in their reasoning.

Lay abstract: Autistic people often experience challenges in social contexts, and when decisions need to be made quickly. There is evidence showing that autistic people have a tendency for greater deliberation and lower intuition, compared to non-autistic people. This has led to the researchers' proposal that autism is associated with an enhanced level of rationality. However, these theories have been mostly explored through the lens of either only non-social domain or only social domain. To address this gap, we recruited autistic adults and carefully matched them with non-autistic adults for comparison. We used a task representing both social and non-social interactions in a comparison structure and asked participants' moral judgements on scenarios' main characters. This was complemented by subjective and objective measures of reasoning. Our findings did not reveal meaningful differences between groups in terms of deliberation. However, we did observe that autistic participants self-reported lower levels of intuition, compared to non-autistic participants. Autistic people consistently rate themselves as less intuitive than their counterparts. Nevertheless, objective evidence supporting this across tasks and studies is inconsistent.

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来源期刊
Autism
Autism PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL-
CiteScore
9.80
自引率
11.50%
发文量
160
期刊介绍: Autism is a major, peer-reviewed, international journal, published 8 times a year, publishing research of direct and practical relevance to help improve the quality of life for individuals with autism or autism-related disorders. It is interdisciplinary in nature, focusing on research in many areas, including: intervention; diagnosis; training; education; translational issues related to neuroscience, medical and genetic issues of practical import; psychological processes; evaluation of particular therapies; quality of life; family needs; and epidemiological research. Autism provides a major international forum for peer-reviewed research of direct and practical relevance to improving the quality of life for individuals with autism or autism-related disorders. The journal''s success and popularity reflect the recent worldwide growth in the research and understanding of autistic spectrum disorders, and the consequent impact on the provision of treatment and care. Autism is interdisciplinary in nature, focusing on evaluative research in all areas, including: intervention, diagnosis, training, education, neuroscience, psychological processes, evaluation of particular therapies, quality of life issues, family issues and family services, medical and genetic issues, epidemiological research.
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