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Being versus Appearing Socially Uninterested: Challenging Assumptions about Social Motivation in Autism

⚑ Contested
Jaswal, Vikram K, Akhtar, Nameera β€’ 2019 Current Era β€’ nonverbal

πŸ“Œ Appears in:

Plain English Summary

This heavyweight paper β€” with 32 expert commentaries β€” asks a deceptively simple question: what if autistic people who look socially uninterested are actually very interested, just showing it differently? The authors walk through four misread behaviors. Avoiding eye contact? Sensory discomfort, not indifference. Less pointing? A motor-planning challenge, not missing desire to communicate. Repetitive movements? Self-regulation, unrelated to caring about people. Repeating others' words (echolalia)? Actually communicative. The kicker: assuming these behaviors signal low social motivation creates self-fulfilling prophecies. Drawing on cross-cultural evidence and autistic testimony, the paper proposes a neurodiversity-affirming framework recognizing unconventional ways of being social.

Abstract

Progress in psychological science can be limited by a number of factors, not least of which are the starting assumptions of scientists themselves. We believe that some influential accounts of autism rest on a questionable assumption that many of its behavioral characteristics indicate a lack of social interest – an assumption that is flatly contradicted by the testimony of many autistic people themselves. In this article, we challenge this assumption by describing alternative explanations for four such behaviors: (a) low levels of eye contact, (b) infrequent pointing, (c) motor stereotypies, and (d) echolalia. The assumption that autistic people's unusual behaviors indicate diminished social motivation has had profound and often negative effects on the ways they are studied and treated. We argue that understanding and supporting autistic individuals will require interrogating this assumption, taking autistic testimony seriously, considering alternative explanations for unusual behaviors, and investigating unconventional – even idiosyncratic – ways in which autistic individuals may express their social interest. These steps are crucial, we believe, for creating a more accurate, humane, and useful science of autism.

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πŸ“‹ Cite this paper
APA
Jaswal, Vikram K, Akhtar, Nameera (2019). Being versus Appearing Socially Uninterested: Challenging Assumptions about Social Motivation in Autism. Behavioral and Brain Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X18001826
BibTeX
@article{jaswal_2019_being_appearing,
  title = {Being versus Appearing Socially Uninterested: Challenging Assumptions about Social Motivation in Autism},
  author = {Jaswal, Vikram K and Akhtar, Nameera},
  year = {2019},
  journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences},
  doi = {10.1017/S0140525X18001826},
}