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Autistic peer-to-peer information transfer is highly effective

2025-11-17 21:47:12.228698+01 by Dan Lyke 0 comments

Autistic peer-to- peer information transfer is highly effective Catherine J Crompton , Danielle Ropar, and Sue Fletcher-Watson. From the "Lay abstract":

We told one person in each group a story and asked them to share it with another person, and for that person to share it again and so on, until everyone in the group had heard the story. We then looked at how many details of the story had been shared at each stage. We found that autistic people share information with other autistic people as well as non-autistic people do with other non-autistic people. However, when there are mixed groups of autistic and non-autistic people, much less information is shared. Participants were also asked how they felt they had got on with the other person in the interaction. The people in the mixed groups also experienced lower rapport with the person they were sharing the story with.</blocqkuote>

https://doi.org/10.1177/1362361320919286

Via Cohen is a Ghost ‪@skullmandible.bsky.social‬ in the context of talking about how much work it is to learn how to navigate social connections and situations with non-autistic people, and accommodate "normal".

[ related topics: Work, productivity and environment ]

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