MrMacPhisto wrote:
First: There was a series of puzzle I had to do. I think I was being timed or something to see how long I would do them for.
That's executive function. How quick is your brain kind of thing.
MrMacPhisto wrote:
Secondly: I was asked a few very odd questions. Can’t remember the actual questions but the only way I can describe it is as if they are asking you what do very random things have in common for example a ship and a box.
That has to do with whether you can imagine similarities. The one you gave is a good example. Ship? Box? They both hold things. If the similarity isn't immediately obvious to you the questions seem pointless.
This one is also common. They'll show you a picture, often a stylized drawing of some people doing different things and ask you to tell them a story about what's happening. Most autistics will simply state the obvious. "That man is raking. The woman in the doorway is pregnant. That man looks angry. That's it. There's nothing else going on."
A lot of NT's will make stuff up that can't be seen. "The man is probably the father of the woman's baby. Maybe they aren't married and that's why the other man is mad because he's her father."
Supposedly autistics don't have the imagination to put all those unknowns into the story. Autistics supposedly only will talk about what's obvious because nothing else really matters and making up fiction is pointless. Of course none of that in entirely true, but
some of us do have a tendency to have a harder time with that kind of thing. Seeing that during testing can help them arrive at a more accurate diagnosis.
_________________
I'm not likely to be around much longer. As before when I first signed up here years ago, I'm finding that after a long hiatus, and after only a few days back on here, I'm spending way too much time here again already. So I'm requesting my account be locked, banned or whatever. It's just time. Until then, well, I dunno...