Well here's something that doesn't surprise me in the least.
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Well here's something that doesn't surprise me in the least.
People with similar levels of autistic traits show greater social attraction to one another, and their brains synchronize in unique ways during active conversation. A recent experiment published in Biological Psychiatry suggests that social difficulties related to autism might be a problem of mismatched communication styles rather than an inherent social deficit.
This matches with our own life experience very well. It is much easier for us to be social with other autistics than to do so with neurotypical people.
Brain scans reveal how people with autistic traits connect differently
A new study shows that individuals with similar levels of autistic traits are naturally drawn to one another. Brain scans reveal they use alternative, highly effective neural strategies to connect, challenging traditional deficit-based models of autism.
PsyPost - Psychology News (www.psypost.org)
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Well here's something that doesn't surprise me in the least.
People with similar levels of autistic traits show greater social attraction to one another, and their brains synchronize in unique ways during active conversation. A recent experiment published in Biological Psychiatry suggests that social difficulties related to autism might be a problem of mismatched communication styles rather than an inherent social deficit.
This matches with our own life experience very well. It is much easier for us to be social with other autistics than to do so with neurotypical people.
Brain scans reveal how people with autistic traits connect differently
A new study shows that individuals with similar levels of autistic traits are naturally drawn to one another. Brain scans reveal they use alternative, highly effective neural strategies to connect, challenging traditional deficit-based models of autism.
PsyPost - Psychology News (www.psypost.org)
@moriel it's all well and good till you end up with a 100% AuDHD household and yet the dishes still have to get done and somebody has to call five contractors for quotes.
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Well here's something that doesn't surprise me in the least.
People with similar levels of autistic traits show greater social attraction to one another, and their brains synchronize in unique ways during active conversation. A recent experiment published in Biological Psychiatry suggests that social difficulties related to autism might be a problem of mismatched communication styles rather than an inherent social deficit.
This matches with our own life experience very well. It is much easier for us to be social with other autistics than to do so with neurotypical people.
Brain scans reveal how people with autistic traits connect differently
A new study shows that individuals with similar levels of autistic traits are naturally drawn to one another. Brain scans reveal they use alternative, highly effective neural strategies to connect, challenging traditional deficit-based models of autism.
PsyPost - Psychology News (www.psypost.org)
There's been some interesting linguistic work done on this, also:
What Is Occult Grammar?
Writing and Stuff from Isaac Z. Schlueter
(blog.izs.me)
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@moriel it's all well and good till you end up with a 100% AuDHD household and yet the dishes still have to get done and somebody has to call five contractors for quotes.
@wronglang
@moriel
Five contractors!! At that point it's time to disappear into the forest and live in a cave

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Well here's something that doesn't surprise me in the least.
People with similar levels of autistic traits show greater social attraction to one another, and their brains synchronize in unique ways during active conversation. A recent experiment published in Biological Psychiatry suggests that social difficulties related to autism might be a problem of mismatched communication styles rather than an inherent social deficit.
This matches with our own life experience very well. It is much easier for us to be social with other autistics than to do so with neurotypical people.
Brain scans reveal how people with autistic traits connect differently
A new study shows that individuals with similar levels of autistic traits are naturally drawn to one another. Brain scans reveal they use alternative, highly effective neural strategies to connect, challenging traditional deficit-based models of autism.
PsyPost - Psychology News (www.psypost.org)
@moriel Reminds me of the t4t couples I know too, understanding each other better helps in relationships.
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Well here's something that doesn't surprise me in the least.
People with similar levels of autistic traits show greater social attraction to one another, and their brains synchronize in unique ways during active conversation. A recent experiment published in Biological Psychiatry suggests that social difficulties related to autism might be a problem of mismatched communication styles rather than an inherent social deficit.
This matches with our own life experience very well. It is much easier for us to be social with other autistics than to do so with neurotypical people.
Brain scans reveal how people with autistic traits connect differently
A new study shows that individuals with similar levels of autistic traits are naturally drawn to one another. Brain scans reveal they use alternative, highly effective neural strategies to connect, challenging traditional deficit-based models of autism.
PsyPost - Psychology News (www.psypost.org)
@moriel ach, nee, echt?!...
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Well here's something that doesn't surprise me in the least.
People with similar levels of autistic traits show greater social attraction to one another, and their brains synchronize in unique ways during active conversation. A recent experiment published in Biological Psychiatry suggests that social difficulties related to autism might be a problem of mismatched communication styles rather than an inherent social deficit.
This matches with our own life experience very well. It is much easier for us to be social with other autistics than to do so with neurotypical people.
Brain scans reveal how people with autistic traits connect differently
A new study shows that individuals with similar levels of autistic traits are naturally drawn to one another. Brain scans reveal they use alternative, highly effective neural strategies to connect, challenging traditional deficit-based models of autism.
PsyPost - Psychology News (www.psypost.org)
@moriel I can definitely tell you that I only ever feel like I have a social deficit with neurotypicals. Throw me into a room with people on the spectrum, and I'm fine. I mean, except for the noise and the many people. But it's not the social interaction itself that is the issue then

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@wronglang
@moriel
Five contractors!! At that point it's time to disappear into the forest and live in a cave

@3TomatoesShort @moriel but how do you get the contractor who will dig your cave!

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@3TomatoesShort @moriel but how do you get the contractor who will dig your cave!

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R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic
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@wronglang
@moriel
Five contractors!! At that point it's time to disappear into the forest and live in a cave

@3TomatoesShort @moriel it's five because one will be too busy and tell you, one will be too busy and give you the "fuck off" price, one will sound enthusiastic and ghost you, and you still need three quotes to compare...
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Well here's something that doesn't surprise me in the least.
People with similar levels of autistic traits show greater social attraction to one another, and their brains synchronize in unique ways during active conversation. A recent experiment published in Biological Psychiatry suggests that social difficulties related to autism might be a problem of mismatched communication styles rather than an inherent social deficit.
This matches with our own life experience very well. It is much easier for us to be social with other autistics than to do so with neurotypical people.
Brain scans reveal how people with autistic traits connect differently
A new study shows that individuals with similar levels of autistic traits are naturally drawn to one another. Brain scans reveal they use alternative, highly effective neural strategies to connect, challenging traditional deficit-based models of autism.
PsyPost - Psychology News (www.psypost.org)
@moriel sounds like mutual and consensual unmaksing

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Well here's something that doesn't surprise me in the least.
People with similar levels of autistic traits show greater social attraction to one another, and their brains synchronize in unique ways during active conversation. A recent experiment published in Biological Psychiatry suggests that social difficulties related to autism might be a problem of mismatched communication styles rather than an inherent social deficit.
This matches with our own life experience very well. It is much easier for us to be social with other autistics than to do so with neurotypical people.
Brain scans reveal how people with autistic traits connect differently
A new study shows that individuals with similar levels of autistic traits are naturally drawn to one another. Brain scans reveal they use alternative, highly effective neural strategies to connect, challenging traditional deficit-based models of autism.
PsyPost - Psychology News (www.psypost.org)
@moriel @grrrr_shark Vindicated!
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@wronglang
@moriel
Five contractors!! At that point it's time to disappear into the forest and live in a cave

@3TomatoesShort @wronglang @moriel try breaking them up into 80 contractors
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Well here's something that doesn't surprise me in the least.
People with similar levels of autistic traits show greater social attraction to one another, and their brains synchronize in unique ways during active conversation. A recent experiment published in Biological Psychiatry suggests that social difficulties related to autism might be a problem of mismatched communication styles rather than an inherent social deficit.
This matches with our own life experience very well. It is much easier for us to be social with other autistics than to do so with neurotypical people.
Brain scans reveal how people with autistic traits connect differently
A new study shows that individuals with similar levels of autistic traits are naturally drawn to one another. Brain scans reveal they use alternative, highly effective neural strategies to connect, challenging traditional deficit-based models of autism.
PsyPost - Psychology News (www.psypost.org)
@moriel Agree so hard my head spins. I do use the phrase "touch antennae" for getting technical people to talk directly to each other, and it's not facetious.
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Well here's something that doesn't surprise me in the least.
People with similar levels of autistic traits show greater social attraction to one another, and their brains synchronize in unique ways during active conversation. A recent experiment published in Biological Psychiatry suggests that social difficulties related to autism might be a problem of mismatched communication styles rather than an inherent social deficit.
This matches with our own life experience very well. It is much easier for us to be social with other autistics than to do so with neurotypical people.
Brain scans reveal how people with autistic traits connect differently
A new study shows that individuals with similar levels of autistic traits are naturally drawn to one another. Brain scans reveal they use alternative, highly effective neural strategies to connect, challenging traditional deficit-based models of autism.
PsyPost - Psychology News (www.psypost.org)
This matches my five decades of lived experience and social struggles!
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R relay@relay.infosec.exchange shared this topic
