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  3. Subject: Autistic ‘black and white’ thinking.

Subject: Autistic ‘black and white’ thinking.

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neurodiversityaudhdactuallyautistineurodivergentautism
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  • katyelphinstone@mas.toK katyelphinstone@mas.to

    Subject: Autistic ‘black and white’ thinking.

    It's framed as a deficit often seen in autism, but... is it that simple?

    Autistic people are traditionally criticized for our inflexibility, or cognitive rigidity.

    But I think this isn’t the whole picture.

    To start with what we know, here are ten things we autistic people generally have in common (refs at the end of the thread):

    ⬇️

    #Autism #Neurodivergent #ActuallyAutistic #AuDHD #Neurodiversity

    saltywizard@beige.partyS This user is from outside of this forum
    saltywizard@beige.partyS This user is from outside of this forum
    saltywizard@beige.party
    wrote last edited by
    #53

    @KatyElphinstone

    basking in the glow of this well-written, well-researched thesis.
    thank you for this affirmation.

    katyelphinstone@mas.toK 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • leonavis@mountains.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
      leonavis@mountains.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
      leonavis@mountains.social
      wrote last edited by
      #54

      @compost_funeral Easy fix. Tell them you are. Then laugh.

      Humour creates critical distance and breaks up the tension for both of you. And if it doesn't (ie they don't share the laugh)... At least you had a good laugh.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • saltywizard@beige.partyS saltywizard@beige.party

        @KatyElphinstone

        basking in the glow of this well-written, well-researched thesis.
        thank you for this affirmation.

        katyelphinstone@mas.toK This user is from outside of this forum
        katyelphinstone@mas.toK This user is from outside of this forum
        katyelphinstone@mas.to
        wrote last edited by
        #55

        @saltywizard

        Thank you 🙏 😊

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • simondassow@masto.aiS simondassow@masto.ai

          @KatyElphinstone Amazing, couldn't agree more. And beyond autistic people I think it applies to most highly sensitive, deep thinking people. Because to us it's logic, which is needed to reason. Also why insensitive people don't like us a lot of times I think, as we reinforce their cognitive dissonance.

          jexner@tooting.chJ This user is from outside of this forum
          jexner@tooting.chJ This user is from outside of this forum
          jexner@tooting.ch
          wrote last edited by
          #56

          @simondassow @KatyElphinstone ADHD person here, and the whole thread is giving me good feelings. I can relate, probably bcs I'm ticking that way, too, at least to an extent.
          Thanks a lot!

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • katyelphinstone@mas.toK katyelphinstone@mas.to

            Subject: Autistic ‘black and white’ thinking.

            It's framed as a deficit often seen in autism, but... is it that simple?

            Autistic people are traditionally criticized for our inflexibility, or cognitive rigidity.

            But I think this isn’t the whole picture.

            To start with what we know, here are ten things we autistic people generally have in common (refs at the end of the thread):

            ⬇️

            #Autism #Neurodivergent #ActuallyAutistic #AuDHD #Neurodiversity

            seconduniverse@autistics.lifeS This user is from outside of this forum
            seconduniverse@autistics.lifeS This user is from outside of this forum
            seconduniverse@autistics.life
            wrote last edited by
            #57

            @KatyElphinstone this is the first post I have ever bookmarked. Don't want to lose this thread. Lots of good reading material. About Greta Thunberg - I see things in black or white / good or bad, but at the same time I look at the complexities of things. I feel sometimes people say I am black or white because they choose not to think about things in any depth. It's like I don't want to leave things in a state of uncertainty.

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • katyelphinstone@mas.toK katyelphinstone@mas.to

              2: Probability thinking and autism.

              There’s growing discussion in cognitive science that many autistic people:
              - Prefer system-level pattern detection
              - Track contingencies more explicitly
              - Think in conditional structures (“if X, then Y”)
              - Notice statistical irregularities

              That isn’t black-and-white thinking.
              That’s model-based reasoning.

              If anything, it can tolerate uncertainty better, because uncertainty is explicitly modeled rather than socially smoothed over.

              ⬇️

              cassandra@ottawa.placeC This user is from outside of this forum
              cassandra@ottawa.placeC This user is from outside of this forum
              cassandra@ottawa.place
              wrote last edited by
              #58

              @KatyElphinstone Logic was one of my favourite courses in university. 😄 I loved playing with if-thens.

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • katyelphinstone@mas.toK katyelphinstone@mas.to

                I think we autistics might know all this in our bones. In our hearts. Somewhere, anyway… but usually on an instinctive level.

                Even if we’re not aware of our reasons or motivations, and instead struggle with shame and self-doubt (just as we’re encouraged and socialized to do).

                But… clarity is the enemy of oppression!

                It replaces confusion with transparency. It throws light on the landscape 🔦

                ⬇️

                #PowerDynamics #SocialHierarchies #EpistemicInjustice

                cassandra@ottawa.placeC This user is from outside of this forum
                cassandra@ottawa.placeC This user is from outside of this forum
                cassandra@ottawa.place
                wrote last edited by
                #59

                @KatyElphinstone [contemplates getting "clarity is the enemy of oppression" as a tattoo]

                katyelphinstone@mas.toK 1 Reply Last reply
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                • instantiatethis@keyboards.socialI This user is from outside of this forum
                  instantiatethis@keyboards.socialI This user is from outside of this forum
                  instantiatethis@keyboards.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #60

                  @compost_funeral @KatyElphinstone whoa this just helped explain multiple issues in my personal and professional life

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • katyelphinstone@mas.toK katyelphinstone@mas.to

                    @jessica

                    I've also wondered about Greta Thunberg saying that.

                    I think what she maybe means is that there's clarity on things, for her. Which would make what she's saying pretty similar to what's laid out here. She's probably been accused many times of being "black and white" because of it.

                    everythingalsocan@techhub.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
                    everythingalsocan@techhub.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
                    everythingalsocan@techhub.social
                    wrote last edited by
                    #61

                    @KatyElphinstone @jessica Maybe she meant "all or nothing"?

                    Sentences like "Yes, the planet is dying, but think of the share holders", or "Yes, we should save the environment, but actually doing anything is inconvenient, so maybe not?" just don't sit right for anyone thinking this through.

                    Hell, yes, we do need to do whatever it takes to save the environment. Seeing that as non-negotiable and not wanting to tone it down for the sake of profit or convenience would be perceived as "inflexible black and white thinking" by anyone who has a "more flexible" view of the situation and weighs profit or convenience against long term survivability.

                    Weighing the pros and cons of saving the environment and deciding that nothing is worth causing even more destruction seems reasonable to me, but is of course as "black and white" as it can get.

                    marsiposa@social.coopM 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • katyelphinstone@mas.toK katyelphinstone@mas.to

                      @jessica

                      I've also wondered about Greta Thunberg saying that.

                      I think what she maybe means is that there's clarity on things, for her. Which would make what she's saying pretty similar to what's laid out here. She's probably been accused many times of being "black and white" because of it.

                      axnxcamr@mstdn.caA This user is from outside of this forum
                      axnxcamr@mstdn.caA This user is from outside of this forum
                      axnxcamr@mstdn.ca
                      wrote last edited by
                      #62

                      @KatyElphinstone @jessica

                      While I have nothing but respect for Greta Thunberg and her multiple causes, we must not forget she is primarily a public and political figure. What we see, what she says, is carefully crafted to serve those causes. While I don't doubt for a second she is Autistic, she could very well uses this as a way to say and do things she otherwise could not.

                      Masking is a form of protection, but it can also be a tool, or even a weapon. I'm convinced the Greta we see is a persona. Very close to the real her, but some things hidden and some exaggerated. That "black and white" thing might be more a communication tool than a real trait of her.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • katyelphinstone@mas.toK katyelphinstone@mas.to

                        @jessica

                        I've also wondered about Greta Thunberg saying that.

                        I think what she maybe means is that there's clarity on things, for her. Which would make what she's saying pretty similar to what's laid out here. She's probably been accused many times of being "black and white" because of it.

                        cassandra@ottawa.placeC This user is from outside of this forum
                        cassandra@ottawa.placeC This user is from outside of this forum
                        cassandra@ottawa.place
                        wrote last edited by
                        #63

                        @KatyElphinstone @jessica I tend to think I get black and white around principles, specifically, where allistics are happy to compromise / turn a blind eye.

                        pacificnic@zeroes.caP 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • katyelphinstone@mas.toK katyelphinstone@mas.to

                          @dedicto

                          Thank you.
                          Lovely summary!

                          @autistics

                          dedicto@zeroes.caD This user is from outside of this forum
                          dedicto@zeroes.caD This user is from outside of this forum
                          dedicto@zeroes.ca
                          wrote last edited by
                          #64

                          @KatyElphinstone @autistics Between "theory of mind deficits", "restricted interests", and now "rigid thinking", it's starting to look as though neurotypicals commenting on autistics is a case of "Every accusation is a confession".

                          murdoc@autistics.lifeM katyelphinstone@mas.toK raphaelmorgan@disabled.socialR milkman76@med-mastodon.comM 4 Replies Last reply
                          0
                          • katyelphinstone@mas.toK katyelphinstone@mas.to

                            @jessica

                            I've also wondered about Greta Thunberg saying that.

                            I think what she maybe means is that there's clarity on things, for her. Which would make what she's saying pretty similar to what's laid out here. She's probably been accused many times of being "black and white" because of it.

                            sinvega@mas.toS This user is from outside of this forum
                            sinvega@mas.toS This user is from outside of this forum
                            sinvega@mas.to
                            wrote last edited by
                            #65

                            @KatyElphinstone @jessica I think the distinction there is that it wasn't grey. It was "no, it's black and white, in a specific arrangement. If you look at it properly they're clearly separated."

                            katyelphinstone@mas.toK 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • paco@infosec.exchangeP paco@infosec.exchange

                              @KatyElphinstone Being unambiguous is not “black and white” nor is it limiting. One can have a huge rainbow of clearly defined colours. Blue is not red, yellow is not green. But there are limitless colours. I suspect sometimes people mistake a strong desire for clarity to be a refusal to accept complexity. Sometimes it’s just a stubborn effort to understand or organise the complexity.

                              I love the phrase “pattern-seeking missile.”

                              neverbeaten@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                              neverbeaten@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                              neverbeaten@mas.to
                              wrote last edited by
                              #66

                              @paco @KatyElphinstone
                              It’s amazing to me how satisfied some NTs are with poor communication (ambiguity) when they could choose to express their ideas completely and effectively without a lot more effort.

                              How much chaos and wasted effort could be avoided by using a dozen more well-considered words?

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • katyelphinstone@mas.toK katyelphinstone@mas.to

                                2: Probability thinking and autism.

                                There’s growing discussion in cognitive science that many autistic people:
                                - Prefer system-level pattern detection
                                - Track contingencies more explicitly
                                - Think in conditional structures (“if X, then Y”)
                                - Notice statistical irregularities

                                That isn’t black-and-white thinking.
                                That’s model-based reasoning.

                                If anything, it can tolerate uncertainty better, because uncertainty is explicitly modeled rather than socially smoothed over.

                                ⬇️

                                x0@dragonscave.spaceX This user is from outside of this forum
                                x0@dragonscave.spaceX This user is from outside of this forum
                                x0@dragonscave.space
                                wrote last edited by
                                #67

                                @KatyElphinstone I wonder if that's what allows my brain to model the flow of code! I've been coding in a very limited programming language that doesn't support exceptions being caught after the fact really, so I have to preemptively know all the potential failure modes and either design such that they don't occur or else slip in explicit guards for them. I'm literally mapping the flow of execution through conditional statements and the parameters that I have either in my head or in the code itself and try to think about places it could go wrong. Often I'll be thinking of these things before I've ever written a line of it.

                                katyelphinstone@mas.toK murdoc@autistics.lifeM 2 Replies Last reply
                                0
                                • leonavis@mountains.socialL leonavis@mountains.social

                                  @KatyElphinstone dunno if you know that proverb, someone once told me: "In the end, everything's alright. If it isn't alright yet, it isn't the end yet."

                                  My reaction was "In the end, we're all dead."

                                  Which is true, but a little demotivating to a lot of people. Just as plenty people seem to feel horrified when I explain the myth of Sisyphos and the philosophy of Absurdism to them, which feels very comforting to me. You just roll the stone up the hill every day while maintaining a smile and some day you don't.

                                  Probably should mention that I was never diagnosed with autism, but a lot of these points seem quite fitting.

                                  shinybat@zeroes.caS This user is from outside of this forum
                                  shinybat@zeroes.caS This user is from outside of this forum
                                  shinybat@zeroes.ca
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #68

                                  @leonavis @KatyElphinstone "In the long run we are all dead" - John Maynard Keynes

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • katyelphinstone@mas.toK katyelphinstone@mas.to

                                    3: Conceptual vs social uncertainty.

                                    Many autistic people seem to tolerate:
                                    - Conceptual ambiguity
                                    - Abstract uncertainty
                                    - Complex models
                                    - Open-ended questions

                                    But we do struggle with:
                                    - Unstated social rules
                                    - Hidden expectations
                                    - Implicit hierarchy shifts
                                    - Unpredictable human behavior

                                    So the discomfort isn’t with uncertainty per se. It’s with unmodeled variables.

                                    Which ties in with discomfort with social reassurance, e.g. with trusting “everything will be fine.”

                                    ⬇️

                                    shinybat@zeroes.caS This user is from outside of this forum
                                    shinybat@zeroes.caS This user is from outside of this forum
                                    shinybat@zeroes.ca
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #69

                                    @KatyElphinstone My brain absolutely wants to quantify all the things - I can be debilitatingly clarity-seeking, but if that clarity is "these are the known possibilities and how likely they each are," that tends to work too, in a way social reassurance extremely doesn't.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • katyelphinstone@mas.toK katyelphinstone@mas.to

                                      I think our bones are right.

                                      In fact, I think embracing a reasoning style based on data, patterns, and probability could be a huge bonus for everyone.

                                      As – objectively speaking – it could pave the road for authenticity, equity, and justice to replace former murkiness, power plays, and empty promises.

                                      End of 🧵

                                      References below 👇

                                      R This user is from outside of this forum
                                      R This user is from outside of this forum
                                      roy_fireball@mastodon.social
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #70

                                      @KatyElphinstone
                                      You hear that guys? We got good bones!

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • everythingalsocan@techhub.socialE everythingalsocan@techhub.social

                                        @KatyElphinstone That may be why traditional advertisement doesn't work on us - we simply don't trust it.

                                        Speaking for myself, no matter how promising an advertisement looks, I'll ignore it simply because it's advertisement. It's not a trustworthy source of information. Broken promises is all I'll ever expect from advertisement.

                                        (That framing would also indicate what type of advertisement does work: anything from a trustworthy source, for example product information or recommendations contained in articles or blog posts from authors we consider reliable.)

                                        shinybat@zeroes.caS This user is from outside of this forum
                                        shinybat@zeroes.caS This user is from outside of this forum
                                        shinybat@zeroes.ca
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #71

                                        @everythingalsocan @KatyElphinstone I know every one of my phone or laptop acquisition decisions for many years has been the product of an awful lot of research dives, typically starting only a few months after getting the last one 😂

                                        (It would be the same for cars if I was a driver. I'm not a driver, for both SPD and ethical reasons.)

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • katyelphinstone@mas.toK katyelphinstone@mas.to

                                          2: Probability thinking and autism.

                                          There’s growing discussion in cognitive science that many autistic people:
                                          - Prefer system-level pattern detection
                                          - Track contingencies more explicitly
                                          - Think in conditional structures (“if X, then Y”)
                                          - Notice statistical irregularities

                                          That isn’t black-and-white thinking.
                                          That’s model-based reasoning.

                                          If anything, it can tolerate uncertainty better, because uncertainty is explicitly modeled rather than socially smoothed over.

                                          ⬇️

                                          shinybat@zeroes.caS This user is from outside of this forum
                                          shinybat@zeroes.caS This user is from outside of this forum
                                          shinybat@zeroes.ca
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #72

                                          @KatyElphinstone *Quantified* uncertainty is certainly easier to handle!

                                          I'm a vocal composer, and as a white cis man (at least to a first approximation) I have all sorts of anxiety about being perceived to be making unfair demands on singers who aren't.

                                          But what counts as this anyway? It's very contextual!

                                          So my writing is overwhelmingly for specific individual singers, who can meet my clarity-seeking demands by explaining what their voices can and can't do, and where there is uncertainty - e.g. in how long one can sing between breaths, which is quite contextually variable - can make *that* clear.

                                          And while classical singers tend to get prescriptive "fach" vocal labels - and are most of the singers who can meet my certainty-seeking demands probably for precisely that reason of having a career-defining label based on these specifics - I don't think about which of these labels fit, at least not on the level of "this is a lyric mezzo I will write a lyric mezzo piece." (One of my muses *did* end up shifting fach soon after I wrote for her - and my pattern detection made me half-anticipate it! - but I wrote for the specific parameters I was given, including stretching her in a specific direction she figured she'd need for her soon-to-be-former fach...)

                                          So I can reliably write things that people I write for will happily sing and sing well. The *social perception* aspect is far more difficult for me to handle, because I can't quantify "how likely is it that people think I'm a cis man sexualising female-coded voices because I'm drawn to warm low notes and floaty ethereal high ones?" (Which I am... For the same sensory reasons I'm sex-averse...)

                                          If the uncertainty is explicit to a working model (in this case, of What Voice X Can Do), I can account for it. If it's rooted in the unpredictability of NT thoughts, not so much...

                                          katyelphinstone@mas.toK 1 Reply Last reply
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