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Q
Tufted Titmouse
Tufted Titmouse

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Joined: 7 Nov 2007
Age: 34
Gender: Male
Posts: 32

06 Aug 2008, 1:53 pm

Hello everyone! I'm Q, as such, I go away for long periods of time, and appear when you least expect me :P

Anyway, recently, I thought it best to let you know one of my discoveries I perchanced upon within the Wibbly Wobbly Web.

Quote:
These patients were a puzzle because although they still lived alone, successfully, in the city, they really should not have been able to do so. On standard psychological tests they performed rather dismally. They should have been unable to cope with the demands of daily life. What was going on?

A sequence of visits to their home environments provided the answer. These home environments, it transpired, were wonderfully calibrated to support and scaffold these biological brains. The homes were stuffed full of cognitive props, tools, and aids. Examples included message centers where they stored notes about what to do and when; photos of family and friends complete with indications of names and relationships; labels and pictures on doors; "memory books" to record new events, meetings, and plans; and "open-storage" strategies in which crucial items (pots, pans, checkbooks) are always kept in plain view, not locked away in drawers.

Before you allow this image of intensive scaffolding to simply confirm your opinion of these patients as hopelessly cognitively compromised, try to imagine a world in which normal human brains are somewhat Alzheimic. Imagine that in this world we had gradually evolved a society in which the kinds of scaffolding found in the St. Louis home environments were the norm. And then reflect that, in a certain sense, this is exactly what we have done. Our own pens, paper, notebooks, diaries, and alarm clocks complement our brute biological profiles in much the same kind of way. Yet we never say of the artist, or poet, or scientist, "Oh, poor soul -- she is not really responsible for that painting/theory/poem; for don't you see how she had to rely on pen, paper, and sketches to offset the inadequacies of her own brain?"


So, I thought, if those people have tools to assist them with their environment, I wondered if there was anything out there for Aspergics, and others on the Spectrum.

So, I've found one, I urge you people to see if there are any others.


Here it is

Now, that allows me to judge the emotional context of news articles from BBC News, which makes my life a damn-sight easier as I normally can spend half an hour in 'high attention mode' deciphering articles.

Enjoy,

-Q



patternist
Veteran
Veteran

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Joined: 28 Jul 2008
Age: 51
Gender: Female
Posts: 1,606
Location: at my computer

06 Aug 2008, 1:59 pm

I don't have any that immediately spring to mind, but ohmygod I love it. I will be looking.