octoperson

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 0 points 11 months ago

I'm using an LG K9 right now. Works ok, but I'd prefer a smaller screen

0
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

(first post)

Thanks to everybody who took part. Now it's time to see the results. I've counted up everyone's agreements and disagreements (using some amount of reading between the lines. I didn't count any that were unclear). The 'autistic' answer for each statement is indicated with bold type:

statement agree disagree
I often notice small sounds when others do not. 23 0
When I’m reading a story, I find it difficult to work out the characters’ intentions. 5 1
I find it easy to "read between the lines" when someone is talking to me. 0 6
I usually concentrate more on the whole picture, rather than the small details. 0 4
I know how to tell if someone listening to me is getting bored. 2 4
I find it easy to do more than one thing at once. 1 4
I find it easy to work out what someone is thinking or feeling just by looking at their face. 1 5
If there is an interruption, I can switch back to what I was doing very quickly. 3 4
I like to collect information about categories of things. 5 2
I find it difficult to work out people’s intentions. 4 0

So, lemmy.world/autism picked the autistic option every time and scored a perfect 10/10. Interestingly, if we weight it proportionately according to how many picked each option, we only get 6.2, barely over the threshold.

Scores of 6 or over indicate possible autism spectrum disorder, so lemmy.world/autism should seriously consider the possibility that they may be autistic.

(Personally, I got 8. Go me!)

My intentions for running this test was it would be interesting and fun, and I think it was (One respondent was concerned I might have some undisclosed professional interest - I don't, but thanks for looking out for the community). I think the main takeaway is that interpreting self-report questions can be really hard.

Should I do another? If so, should I do anything differently?

1
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

There is (as far as I know) no easy way to copy a user handle to mention them in a post or comment. There isn't a UI element or menu option on a post to do this. I can go to their just page and use the share button, but then I get (for example):

https://lemmy.guide/link?target=@[email protected]

That's not Zach's instance, it's mine. To get the user handle I'd have to edit out the URL part, and change to the correct instance @[email protected].

Is that how it's supposed to work? Is the instance change thing a bug? Is there a better way I don't know about?

[–] [email protected] 0 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

bxa3 on a pastry

[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago (1 children)

The prized all-noun headline

[–] [email protected] 0 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (1 children)

How do I even with this question? The whole picture is made up of small details, and the details are all in the context of the whole picture. So it's both. The answer is both and it depends on what the thing is and why you're having to concentrate on it and where you are in that process. Any project you work on will need big picture perspective to decide what things you need to do, and also need detail perspective to do those things. Any field of study will have its overarching themes and its individual examples.

Let's look another way. I know they're not talking about a literal picture (and why use metaphors in an autism test of all things?), but let's pretend they are. When I look at The Hay Wain I see an idyllic rural scene. Then I see the cart, the house, the horsemen, the dog. I see the whole picture first, then I pick out details. When I look at The Persistence of Memory, I see the face, the clock, the tree, the cliff. Then I wonder what it could mean. I see the details, then (try to) assemble a full picture. It depends. It always flipping depends.

If It gave me specifics, I could answer this. But I'm just floundering with this sort of generality. I am leaning towards Slightly Disagree, only because I am crying out for details trying to interpret this question.

 

This is one of a series of discussion posts based on questions from the AQ-10 autism test.

4. I usually concentrate more on the whole picture, rather than the small details.

  • Definitely Agree
  • Slightly Agree
  • Slightly Disagree
  • Definitely Disagree

Is this statement true for you? Can you think of any examples? Is it an easy or difficult question for you to answer?

You can take the full AQ-10 test here. Note this test is intended as a quick screener, and cannot diagnose or rule out any condition on its own.


First post in this series.
next post

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago

So many times I wanted to talk about 'el año', and instead wrote 'el ano'. 😣

(Spanish. 'the year' vs 'the anus')

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Compared to the first question, I had to think a lot harder about this one. First stumbling block - 'difficult'. Difficult compared to what? Second, 'reading'. Is it ok to also think about characters in films and TV here? Taken at face value, the answer would be no, but the question seems more about interpreting the story than about the medium that the story is in. So film and TV should be ok? I think?

Anyway, characters in stories tend to be pretty explicit in their intentions. Captain Ahab wants to kill the whale, Frodo Baggins wants to destroy the ring, Elizabeth Bennett wants to find a suitable husband. They will explain themselves in dialog, and sometimes even get their thoughts narrated. Sometimes a character's goals will be ambiguous or misleading, and that's deliberate on the part of the author. It's not a problem if you get to the reveal in a mystery novel and don't yet suspect the killer. So, I think I can follow stories well enough. But..

Is there some aspect to characters that I'm not getting, and that I am not aware I'm not getting? There's a kind of intrigue type of stories that just go over my head. I never know what's going on in Scorcese or Frances Coppola movies, for example. And then there's people in the fanfic space who like to ship characters, or imagine this character in that universe, and I don't get it. Back in school we had a book report exercise with questions about the characters and how they develop through the story, and I found it unreasonably difficult to apply those questions to the stories I was reading.

So I'm going to say Slightly Disagree. On the face of it, I can generally understand what I need to follow a story. But I have some doubts, and I don't think I have the insight to assess how relevant those doubts are.


E. After the discussion below, I'm revising this to Slightly Agree. I think there's more going on with this question than I'm able to fathom.

 

This is one of a series of discussion posts based on questions from the AQ-10 autism test.

2. When I’m reading a story, I find it difficult to work out the characters’ intentions.

  • Definitely Agree
  • Slightly Agree
  • Slightly Disagree
  • Definitely Disagree

Is this statement true for you? Can you think of any examples? Is it an easy or difficult question for you to answer?

You can take the full AQ-10 test here. Note this test is intended as a quick screener, and cannot diagnose or rule out any condition on its own.


First post in this series.
next post

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I don't get the gender neutral either (using Gboard on an older Android). Which is a bit odd because as far as I can tell gender neutral is the base character, and the male and female versions are customisations that are applied as if they were accented characters.

I'd rather have them all as no-gender, no-race, generic little yellow peeps but eh..

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I've fixed it! The bottom of the door is attached to a quarter circle panel, which slides into a slot under the floor when the door is closed, and provides a temporary floor when the door is open.

 
[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Getting XCom flashbacks. I'd set up a breach team on the door, and send the rest of the squad round and up that drainpipe so they can drop down from the roof. But best go around the back of the cars so as not to activate through the window.

 

You know The Culture novels by Iain M Banks, right? How it has sentient starships that choose ironic names for themselves like these;

  • Sanctioned Parts List
  • So Much For Subtlety
  • All Through With This Niceness And Negotiation Stuff
  • Attitude Adjuster
  • Of Course I Still Love You
  • Funny, It Worked Last Time...

Well, if you pay attention, you can notice starships hiding in plain sight all around you. Here's a few from recent years;

  • Alternative Facts
  • Sigma Grindset
  • The Woke Mind Virus Is Either Defeated Or Nothing Else Matters
  • Girlboss
  • Basket Of Deplorables
  • Are We The Baddies?
  • I Am Not A Robot (Click To Confirm)

In this thread I want to know; what starship names have you spotted in the wild?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Have you all forgotten that they directly addressed this in the show? https://youtu.be/Q9W7pvOLxmQ

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Stamets, put Lemmy down! You can post a meme once you've done a task.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago

Oh no, that was my perception in my words. If there was anything so explicitly hostile I would have taken a picture of that instead.

Some context for my reaction - it has a cover letter that mentioned the high demand on the service and 24+ month wait times. Health service provision here (the UK) is highly politicised (as it is everywhere), and services are always under pressure to cut their wait lists. The application pack came in separate sections for standardised assessment forms, and one for admin details like contact numbers and medical history. This question was in the admin section.

I appreciate your point of view though, and it's a reasonable possibility. I'll keep it in mind when I fill it out.

 

My doctor ordered me a pack of forms and questionnaires to request an assessment for adult autism. In amongst the medical histories and self assessments, this question stuck out;

it is important to know that not everyone who is referred to our service will have a diagnosis of autism confirmed. In the space below, tell us how you think having an autism diagnosis confirmed, or not, might impact on you and your life

What's going on here? Do you get asked this for other conditions? We're a community that typically struggles to read between the lines, so I could be way off, but this feels grudging to me. It's a question that says - what's the point of us even offering this service, and why are you so special that we should waste our time on you?

 

Of course you want Björk to talk to you about fungi. That's like, a basic human need.

(Link is to a trailer for an IMAX movie - Fungi : The Web of Life)

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Dilema (sh.itjust.works)
 
 

Look at this post https://sh.itjust.works/post/5863836

It's just a regular image post, hosted on the instance server, but it displays as an external link, & you have to click through to view it.

Earlier, similarly formatted posts to the same community display as normal image posts.

The only difference is that the newer posts include an additional ?format=jpg parameter. I'm guessing this is throwing off the detection of an image post.

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