{"title":"Cross-neurotype communication from an autistic point of view: Insights on autistic Theory of Mind from a focus group study","authors":"Eleonora Marocchini, Irene Baldin","doi":"10.1111/1460-6984.13095","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div>\n \n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Background</h3>\n \n <p>The conceptualisation of autism as a disorder where Theory of Mind (ToM) and pragmatics are fundamentally impaired has prompted a wealth of research on autistic deficits, most of which is characterised by two main assumptions: first, that autistic people would display said deficits, if present, with any conversation partner and in any situation; second, that neurotypical people do not present these deficits, regardless of the conversation partner. However, this is not necessarily reflected in autistic accounts of the way they experience social cognition and pragmatics.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Aims</h3>\n \n <p>The present paper aims to investigate the autistic experience of communication with both autistic and neurotypical people, with a particular focus on their perception of the ability of autistic and neurotypical people to understand their communicative intentions.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Methods & Procedures</h3>\n \n <p>Participants, 23 adult Italian autistic people without intellectual disability or language disorders, were recruited online. Two virtual focus groups of 2 hours each were conducted, transcribed and analysed through thematic analysis with a descriptive phenomenological approach by two independent researchers.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Outcomes & Results</h3>\n \n <p>Six themes were developed from the analysis, the most relevant being Autistic–Autistic communication and Autistic ToM. The results, in line with the Double Empathy theory, suggest there seem to be important differences between neurotypical and autistic people's ToM. These appear to make it easier for autistic people to communicate with one another, as well as to create difficulties for neurotypical people to understand autistic people, not just the other way around.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Conclusions & Implications</h3>\n \n <p>These results seem to confirm that challenges in cross-neurotype communication are better interpreted as mutual miscomprehension and reciprocal differences in ToM rather than deficits on the autistic part. This calls for a reframing of ToM and/or the need for autistic ToM as a construct, of which neurotypical people seem to be lacking. Moreover, these insights should be taken into account for speech and language therapy and clinical practice in general, advocating for a neurodiversity-informed view of co-constructed communication as well as for a broader societal change in which therapists can play a crucial role, through participatory approaches or raising awareness in their daily practice.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS</h3>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> What is already known on the subject</h3>\n \n <div>\n <ul>\n \n <li>Autism is conceived as characterised by social cognition and communication difficulties, often linked to Theory of Mind (ToM) deficits. However, recent research suggested variations in ToM abilities within the autistic population and proposed alternative theories like the Double Empathy theory. Nevertheless, only a few studies examined how autistic individuals perceive communication across neurotypes.</li>\n </ul>\n </div>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> What this study adds</h3>\n \n <div>\n <ul>\n \n <li>Autistic individuals seem to find it easier to communicate with other autistic people, and they identify specific characteristics of neurotypical communication that hinder successful communication. Moreover, neurotypical people are perceived as having difficulties in autistic ToM, which seems to emerge as a relevant and needed construct in light of the Double Empathy problem.</li>\n </ul>\n </div>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> What are the clinical implications of this work?</h3>\n \n <div>\n <ul>\n \n <li>These findings can inform speech and language therapy and clinical practice about the potential gains of raising awareness on the Double Empathy problem and the higher communication ease inside the autistic community, alongside individualised support. Participatory approaches and closer collaboration with the autistic community also seem to be crucial for therapists to help improve communication experiences for autistic individuals.</li>\n </ul>\n </div>\n </section>\n </section>\n </div>","PeriodicalId":49182,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders","volume":"59 6","pages":"2465-2482"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1460-6984.13095","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
The conceptualisation of autism as a disorder where Theory of Mind (ToM) and pragmatics are fundamentally impaired has prompted a wealth of research on autistic deficits, most of which is characterised by two main assumptions: first, that autistic people would display said deficits, if present, with any conversation partner and in any situation; second, that neurotypical people do not present these deficits, regardless of the conversation partner. However, this is not necessarily reflected in autistic accounts of the way they experience social cognition and pragmatics.
Aims
The present paper aims to investigate the autistic experience of communication with both autistic and neurotypical people, with a particular focus on their perception of the ability of autistic and neurotypical people to understand their communicative intentions.
Methods & Procedures
Participants, 23 adult Italian autistic people without intellectual disability or language disorders, were recruited online. Two virtual focus groups of 2 hours each were conducted, transcribed and analysed through thematic analysis with a descriptive phenomenological approach by two independent researchers.
Outcomes & Results
Six themes were developed from the analysis, the most relevant being Autistic–Autistic communication and Autistic ToM. The results, in line with the Double Empathy theory, suggest there seem to be important differences between neurotypical and autistic people's ToM. These appear to make it easier for autistic people to communicate with one another, as well as to create difficulties for neurotypical people to understand autistic people, not just the other way around.
Conclusions & Implications
These results seem to confirm that challenges in cross-neurotype communication are better interpreted as mutual miscomprehension and reciprocal differences in ToM rather than deficits on the autistic part. This calls for a reframing of ToM and/or the need for autistic ToM as a construct, of which neurotypical people seem to be lacking. Moreover, these insights should be taken into account for speech and language therapy and clinical practice in general, advocating for a neurodiversity-informed view of co-constructed communication as well as for a broader societal change in which therapists can play a crucial role, through participatory approaches or raising awareness in their daily practice.
WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS
What is already known on the subject
Autism is conceived as characterised by social cognition and communication difficulties, often linked to Theory of Mind (ToM) deficits. However, recent research suggested variations in ToM abilities within the autistic population and proposed alternative theories like the Double Empathy theory. Nevertheless, only a few studies examined how autistic individuals perceive communication across neurotypes.
What this study adds
Autistic individuals seem to find it easier to communicate with other autistic people, and they identify specific characteristics of neurotypical communication that hinder successful communication. Moreover, neurotypical people are perceived as having difficulties in autistic ToM, which seems to emerge as a relevant and needed construct in light of the Double Empathy problem.
What are the clinical implications of this work?
These findings can inform speech and language therapy and clinical practice about the potential gains of raising awareness on the Double Empathy problem and the higher communication ease inside the autistic community, alongside individualised support. Participatory approaches and closer collaboration with the autistic community also seem to be crucial for therapists to help improve communication experiences for autistic individuals.
背景:自闭症是一种心智理论(ToM)和语用学基本受损的疾病,这一概念引发了大量有关自闭症缺陷的研究,其中大部分研究都有两个主要假设:第一,自闭症患者如果存在上述缺陷,在任何情况下与任何对话伙伴交流时都会表现出这些缺陷;第二,神经典型患者无论与哪种对话伙伴交流都不会表现出这些缺陷。目的:本文旨在研究自闭症患者与自闭症患者和神经症患者的交流体验,尤其关注他们对自闭症患者和神经症患者理解其交流意图的能力的看法:通过网络招募了 23 名没有智力障碍或语言障碍的意大利成年自闭症患者。由两名独立研究人员通过描述性现象学方法进行主题分析,开展了两个虚拟焦点小组活动,每个小组活动 2 小时,并对活动进行了记录和分析:分析得出了六个主题,其中最相关的是自闭症-自闭症沟通和自闭症 ToM。结果与双重移情理论一致,表明神经畸形人与自闭症患者的 ToM 似乎存在重大差异。这些差异似乎使自闭症患者更容易相互沟通,同时也给神经典型患者理解自闭症患者造成了困难,而不仅仅是相反:这些结果似乎证实,跨神经类型交流中的挑战最好被解释为相互误解和 ToM 的相互差异,而不是自闭症患者的缺陷。这就要求我们重新审视 ToM 和/或自闭症 ToM 的必要性,因为神经症患者似乎缺乏这种能力。此外,言语和语言治疗以及临床实践也应考虑到这些见解,倡导以神经多样性为基础的共建沟通观点,以及更广泛的社会变革,治疗师可通过参与式方法或在日常实践中提高意识,在其中发挥重要作用:自闭症被认为是一种以社会认知和沟通障碍为特征的疾病,通常与心智理论(ToM)缺陷有关。然而,最近的研究表明,自闭症患者的心智理论能力存在差异,并提出了 "双重移情理论 "等替代理论。然而,只有少数研究探讨了自闭症患者如何感知不同神经类型的交流。本研究的新增内容 自闭症患者似乎更容易与其他自闭症患者进行交流,他们也能识别出阻碍成功交流的神经类型交流的具体特征。此外,神经类型的人认为自闭症 ToM 存在困难,而鉴于双重移情问题,ToM 似乎是一个相关且需要的结构。这项研究的临床意义是什么?这些研究结果可为言语治疗和临床实践提供信息,使其了解提高对双重移情问题的认识和自闭症群体内部较高的沟通便利性以及个性化支持的潜在收益。参与式方法和与自闭症群体的更紧密合作对于治疗师帮助改善自闭症患者的沟通体验似乎也至关重要。
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders (IJLCD) is the official journal of the Royal College of Speech & Language Therapists. The Journal welcomes submissions on all aspects of speech, language, communication disorders and speech and language therapy. It provides a forum for the exchange of information and discussion of issues of clinical or theoretical relevance in the above areas.