A "radical" new autism spectrum disorder theory

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Magneto
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18 Jun 2009, 8:12 am

It's hard to comfort someone when you're overwhelmed with grief yourself which isn't even yours.

I feel empathy a lot now. Every song that I can be bothered to listen to puts me in the figurative shoes of the writer, whatever the song meaning is. I keep it to myself. Some songs, it would be embarressing not to :wink:



Dantac
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18 Jun 2009, 5:13 pm

"suggests that the fundamental problem in autism-spectrum disorders is not a social deficiency, but rather an hypersensitivity to experience, which includes an overwhelming fear response."


That I think is very accurate.



Rainbow-Squirrel
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18 Jun 2009, 5:46 pm

Yeah, it's like we miss some kind of filter, in both directions.



Chibi_Neko
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18 Jun 2009, 5:55 pm

Pfffft...
I would not call this 'groundbreaking' as they say in the artical. I could have told them this stuff 20 years ago if they only asked. Do they even 'talk' to people with asperger’s while doing these 'studies'?


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Magneto
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19 Jun 2009, 4:21 am

Well, I posted the extreme emotion theory before this thread was created.

I don't think they speak to Aspies/Auties first.



elancee
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19 Jun 2009, 1:31 pm

Rainbow-Squirrel wrote:
Yeah, it's like we miss some kind of filter, in both directions.


Yes, I've been thinking that for most of my life!!



Magneto
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19 Jun 2009, 1:49 pm

If it amplifies empathy... what happens if you place to Auties in a room together and one of them is upset 8O

A switch got flipped recently in regards to empathy. If they tell me, I'll feel it intensely. If they don't, then it's their own damn fault.



ikorack
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19 Jun 2009, 8:23 pm

Maybe scientists are bogarting your guys theory's off the forums?



Confused-Fish
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26 Jun 2009, 8:40 pm

Finally their getting something right! :D



2ukenkerl
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26 Jun 2009, 8:53 pm

OK, ANOTHER odd aspect of my life associated with AS! HECK YEAH! I'm STILL trying to figure out how to explain a problem I am having, but it IS related to THIS!



NarfMann
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27 Jun 2009, 3:23 am

It's an interesting theory with which I can find no fault. It's certainly what I've believed to be how my brain works for a very long time, since long before I knew anything about AS.

So, let's assume we experience emotions so strongly that we develop a block on our own empathy as a survival mechanism, thus seeming to be emotionless and hyper-logical. Does this sound like a description of Vulcans to anyone else?



Raschu
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27 Jun 2009, 4:34 am

NarfMann wrote:
So, let's assume we experience emotions so strongly that we develop a block on our own empathy as a survival mechanism, thus seeming to be emotionless and hyper-logical. Does this sound like a description of Vulcans to anyone else?


The logic answer would be: No, aspies don't have pointy ears. :p

though indeed this article is an interesting theory.


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Chizpurfle52595
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27 Jun 2009, 4:57 am

Apep wrote:
I don't remember being overcome with emotion like that before the age of 17. One day I came down with a fever listening to and conducting along with Mozart's Requiem. My temperature stayed above 104 degrees for three days. I lost 25 pounds. Since then, as my empathic abilities have improved, I've found that I am more frequently overcome with emotions while listening to music, reading books, or watching movies.


How did you lose 25 pounds in 3 days? 8O



Magneto
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27 Jun 2009, 5:20 am

But what about the hypersensory part, and the hyposensory part? If it increases sensory ability as well, and we block it like we do with emotion...

Or maybe it's just an overclocked brain.



Kajjie
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27 Jun 2009, 7:19 am

Hmm... this might be like me. I didn't used to understand other people being upset - I didn't understand why if someone's parents divorced they were very uspet, but now I do understand things like this and I feel upset really because I sense how the world is full of upsetness and it's horrible really. I often wonder if others are as miserable as I think they are. My mum thinks I have good empathy. I think I understand a lot about other people that others don't. I think this is because I know other people don't always think like me, and people who are 'normal'/'NT' don't learn this so well because they always seem like others.


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27 Jun 2009, 7:43 am

It's weird but that's exactly what my brother said to me the other day. He said that I do feel emotions, and more strongly than other people, but I get confused about what the emotions are.


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