starcats wrote:
...not actually asking the kids what's going on inside.
They didn't ask them for this research, either...
Quote:
The research described in the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders by Dr Davis and her three co-authors is based on evidence gathered from 215 questionnaires completed by approximately equal numbers of parents of children with typical development (TD) and of children diagnosed with autistic spectrum disorder (ASD).
This seems to be rife in autism research. The behavioural observations may be accurate, but when making hypotheses about the motivations for the behaviour, researchers often seem to forget that their "empathy" is based on empathising with other non-autistic people. They seem very certain that there is an "empathy gap" which autistic people experience when dealing with the non-autistic world. If this is true, then the gap is just as wide whichever side of it you are on, leaving them with little basis for assuming a motivation for the behaviour - yet they fail to recognise this, or simply appeal to their psychological training (where autistic subjects are outliers.)
If the research subjects themselves are not able to explain their motivations for whatever reason, there are plenty of adults out here who have lived through such a childhood and would gladly share what they experienced when they were growing up.
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