Delayed reactions?
btbnnyr
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Joined: 18 May 2011
Gender: Female
Posts: 7,359
Location: Lost Angleles Carmen Santiago
yes, I do this too. I believe it is part of CAPD - Central Auditory Processing Disorder... All these co morbid things that are so prevailant should not be separate things I think as so many of us experience them.. anyhow... mini side track aside, I think that is what causes it...
Though my boyfriend says I have a 34k modem for a brain while NT's have cable modems lol... he is teasing of course and it always makes me laugh... it helps me not feel so bad when the delay happens
from: http://www.audiology.org/resources/docu ... 8-2010.pdf
difficulty understanding speech in the presence of competing background noise or in reverberant acoustic environments
problems with the ability to localize the source of a signal
difficulty hearing on the phone
inconsistent or inappropriate responses to requests for information
difficulty following rapid speech
frequent requests for repetition and/or rephrasing of information
difficulty following directions
difficulty or inability to detect the subtle changes in prosody that underlie humor and sarcasm
difficulty learning a foreign language or novel speech materials, especially technical language
difficulty maintaining attention
a tendency to be easily distracted
poor singing, musical ability, and/or appreciation of music
academic difficulties, including reading, spelling and/or learning problems
From Wikipedia:
have trouble paying attention to and remembering information presented orally, and may cope better with visually acquired information
have problems carrying out multi-step directions given orally; need to hear only one direction at a time
have poor listening skills
need more time to process information
have low academic performance
have behavior problems
have language difficulties (e.g., they confuse syllable sequences and have problems developing vocabulary and understanding language)
have difficulty with reading, comprehension, spelling, and vocabulary
Hope that helps!
Yes, I get this. Sometimes I laugh when somebody intentionally said something to offend me, which then makes it look like I will put up with any s**t and it makes them think they can get away with offending me more. It takes a few seconds for me to think, ''hang on, they were offending me'', and I then wish I had reacted differently, like looked at them with a ''that wasn't a nice thing to say'' expression on my face, or just quietly walked away or something. But no, the dumb cow (me) had to laugh.
_________________
Female
I have had a tendancy to ask people what they said, even when I did hear it. I remember doing it as a child, and I even remember peope catching me in doing so. They could say something, I would ask them to repeat, and they would refuse and say they think I heard them, and then when I understand it they would laugh and say they knew I heard them.
If they don't repeat it, it takes me only a few more seconds to comprehend their message, but still, the message does not always get through as fast as it should. It is not complicated language, nor is it words I do not know, its just.. the meaning of all the words stringed together that takes a while to puzzle together in my head.
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AQ: 42/50 || SQ: 32/80 || IQ(RPM): 138 || IRI-empathytest(PT/EC/FS/PD): 10(-7)/16(-3)/19(+3)/19(+10) || Alexithymia: 148/185 || Aspie-quiz: AS 133/200, NT 56/200
emimeni
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Joined: 28 Sep 2012
Age: 34
Gender: Female
Posts: 1,065
Location: In my bed, on my laptop
I can really relate to a lot of those symptoms posted by Valkyrie2012, including the delayed reactions.
I work at a Dairy Queen with a drive thru, and I very often have to ask people to repeat themselves or turn off their loud engine when I'm taking orders. My NT coworkers have problems with understanding people at the drive thru as well, but the difference is that when I'm concentrating on listening (and there isn't more than usual background noise), then I can usually understand people better than my coworkers, but when there's more background noise or I'm not really trying to listen (like when I have a headset on, but someone else is taking the order), I'm terrible at hearing any of it.
A lot of times, I say, "What?" asking someone to repeat themself, and then I understand what the person said between when I say "What?" and when they actually repeat themselves.
Also, at my bible study, when it's my turn to read something out loud, I have no idea what I just read until I read it again silently.
(...)
Hope that helps!
Thanks! If my I fail to get an Asperger diagnosis(aka I don't have Aspergers), I will definitly persue this with an audiologist. A very interresting read, thanks to much.
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AQ: 42/50 || SQ: 32/80 || IQ(RPM): 138 || IRI-empathytest(PT/EC/FS/PD): 10(-7)/16(-3)/19(+3)/19(+10) || Alexithymia: 148/185 || Aspie-quiz: AS 133/200, NT 56/200
(...)
Hope that helps!
Thanks! If my I fail to get an Asperger diagnosis(aka I don't have Aspergers), I will definitly persue this with an audiologist. A very interresting read, thanks to much.
Glad my post is found helpful by so many. CAPD and SPD (Sensory Processing Disorder) was actually my first thoughts as to what impedes my life... then of course the last penny dropped when encountering Aspergers. My boyfriend has asked me for years... "are you sure you are not autistic baby" .... and it would send me off on another research tangent to see what it was...
Then of course my mother recently dropped the bombshell of my mom taking me in 1979 for an autism diagnosis and they came back saying I wasn't because I lacked a couple features of "classic autism"
And it turned into "Gloria just being Gloria" and I find that so annoying.
And again... sorry for the side track off topic!
Yes, definitely. I have also always done the thing where I ask people to repeat themselves, not because I didn't hear what was said, but because people always expect a response faster than I can process what they said and the extra few seconds enable me to do that. I have difficulty keeping up with the speed of normal conversations and therefore have difficulty involving myself in them.
It doesn't seem to be restricted to verbal situations either. For example, I seem to have slower reactions than others when driving. When my mother is in the car with me she often gets in a panic and yells at me to stop when there is a red light or a car in front stops, etc. I am generally already in the process of doing what she said, and I've yet to have an accident as a result of it, but it appears that my responses to things happen slower than normal people, which is why they cause alarm to someone with normal response times. I have always refused to drive on the motorway. People keep telling me driving on the motorway is easier - but for me it's more dangerous, because it requires fast responses.
I also fit almost all of the things on that CAD list. It sounds like it is closely tied to autism, since I see those traits discussed here a lot.