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Baron Cohen et al. (1997): Adults with Autism (functioning test of theory of mind)

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    Baron Cohen et al. (1997): Adults with Autism (functioning test of theory of mind)
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    [NARRATOR] Okay, so the next video that
    we are looking at is by Baron-Cohen et al.
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    When it says "et al.,"
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    it means that there has been
    three or more researchers,
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    so if there's one researcher,
    it'll say the researcher's name;
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    if there's two, it will say
    the two researchers' names
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    (for example, Loftus & Palmer);
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    but if there has been three or more,
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    we usually put "et al.,"
    so Baron-Cohen et al.
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    So it was done in 1997
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    and it is looking at autism and
    something called Theory of Mind.
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    So I'm just gonna go
    through some key terms,
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    through a bit of background,
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    so make sure you make notes
    on the background information,
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    and then we'll look at the study.
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    So autism is a developmental disorder,
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    and it affects the social
    functioning of individuals.
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    So it looks at how individuals can
    have impairments in several areas
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    related to their ability
    to function socially,
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    communicate socially,
    and things like that.
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    So if you have autism,
    you're on what is known as a spectrum.
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    So there isn't just one type of autism
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    and [not] everybody who has autism
    has that type of autism, if you will.
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    What it is, is, there's a spectrum,
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    so when you're talking about a spectrum,
    it means a range, okay?
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    The autistic spectrum refers
    to a range of disorders
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    which consist along a continuum
    from mildly affected to severely affected.
  • Not Synced
    This is what your autistic
    spectrum might look like.
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    So it's a continuum.
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    So a continuum means,
    you could fall anywhere along here.
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    So it's not categories.
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    It's not "you're in this category"
    or "you're in this category"
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    or "you're in this category."
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    It means that you could fall
    here or here or here or here
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    so you could be anywhere
    along that continuum.
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    So you could be mildly affected,
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    so individuals who have things
    like high-functioning autism
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    and Asperger's are in
    this mildly affected region.
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    It might mean that
    you've got an average IQ
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    or a slightly above average IQ.
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    It might mean that you have some
    extreme ability in some area,
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    so we have something called autistic
    savants who have particular abilities,
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    particular skills that
    they are incredibly skilled at,
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    like memorizing large amounts of numbers
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    or memorizing what a city looks
    like from above, things like that.
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    But it doesn't actually
    affect your learning
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    in a particular type of severe way.
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    Whereas this end of the spectrum is what's
    known as a severe learning disability,
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    so this is where you'd
    find classic autism,
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    where your learning and skills
    are massively affected.
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    Asperger's Syndrome is when an individual
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    is at the milder end,
    if you will, of the spectrum,
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    and that's not to say-- "mild end,"
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    that's not to say
    it's not affecting you at all;
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    obviously, it is, but it's what's known
    as the milder end of the spectrum.
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    So it means that they have problems
    with social interaction,
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    but they have generally normal levels
    of cognitive development.
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    So we've got high-functioning autism
    and then Asperger's Syndrome.
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    Now, there's a concept
    called Theory of Mind.
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    Theory of Mind is having
    the ability to understand
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    that other people have
    independent minds of their own.
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    So it allows us to understand and predict
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    what other people
    think and feel, basically.
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    So I'm gonna talk a bit more
    about Theory of Mind in a moment.
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    But it's basically understanding
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    that somebody else has
    another mind than you,
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    they know other things than you,
    they've seen other things than you,
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    they feel other things than you.
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    There's a few things that we're gonna
    talk about when it comes to autism.
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    Some of these,
    we're gonna look at in lesson.
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    Half a million people
    in the UK have autism,
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    and boys are four times more likely
    to receive a diagnosis than girls.
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    So the statistics of autism
    is that there are four boys
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    for every one girl that has autism.
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    And there's a number of things
    that people have linked to autism
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    as a factor or a cause.
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    There's this kind of continuing debate
    about whether autism is caused by nature.
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    (Is it something that you're born with?
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    Is it to do with your genetics
    or your neurological development?)
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    Or is it nurture? So is it things like
    how your parents raise you?
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    Is it something that you've
    picked up in your environment,
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    like a bacterial infection?
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    Is it due to being around people
    who smoke, or your mother smoking?
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    Is it due to being in a place
    where there's lots of air pollution,
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    or where there's sorts of pesticides?
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    Or is it to do with something like
    your parent or the age of your parent?
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    Is it something that is
    within the environment?
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    You're gonna research
    some of these in lesson
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    but there's a whole
    different argument there.
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    But essentially, people who
    are on the autistic spectrum
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    have what is known as
    the triad of impairments.
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    So the triad of impairments.
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    If you are on that spectrum,
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    you have difficulties
    in these three areas.
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    So you can have difficulties
    in social communication,
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    so these are things like
    not understanding facial gestures,
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    so like non-verbal communication,
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    They may use a set of phrases repeatedly,
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    They may have difficulties with verbal
    and non-verbal communication;
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    and they may repeat what other people say.
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    Social interaction is another area
    which they may be impaired in,
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    so that might be things like difficulty
    in forming relationships.
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    They don't necessarily want to have eye
    contact or might not want to be touched.
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    They may have difficulty in expressing
    themselves to others like I currently am.
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    And the last area of your
    triad is social imagination,
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    so you might find it difficult
    to imagine how others are feeling
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    or wanting to engage in
    pretend play with others.
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    So that's things like putting yourself
    in somebody else's shoes
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    or understanding other
    people's perspectives
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    or playing role-play games
    like imagination games.
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    If you've ever watched
    any programs or films
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    with somebody who is on
    the autistic spectrum in it,
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    you might see a few of these things,
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    so if you have, I'd encourage you
    to watch those again now
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    and see if you can pick
    any of those things up.
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    There's things like,
    "[Undateable]" is a program
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    which brings a lot of awareness of
    people with autism or with Asperger's,
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    and you quite often see things like having
    certain phrases that they use repeatedly,
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    like there's a fellow on there
    that says "exactly" all the time,
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    so he'll finish a sentence
    and say "exactly."
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    And then he'll say something else
    then turn around and go "exactly."
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    Even if nobody has responded to him,
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    he'll have that phrase
    that he uses quite consistently.
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    TIME 8:15
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    Things that repeating what other people say.
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    If anybody has ever seen "Rainman,"
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    there's a couple of scenes in there
    which really display that.
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    If you have difficulties
    in all three of these areas,
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    right there in the middle, that's you.
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    You'd be on the autistic spectrum.
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    So don't necessarily go,
    "Well, that's me,"
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    which a lot of students do.
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    They'll say, "Oh, I don't like making
    eye contact, so I must be autistic."
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    That's not the case, okay?
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    So you have to have some level
    of impairment in three areas.
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    So don't self-diagnose, is the lesson.
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    So Theory of Mind.
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    So if you lack theory of mind,
    it's known as a cognitive deficit.
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    This is Baron-Cohen, who conducted
    the study [unclear] with his friends.
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    So he suggests that problems
    with developing theory of mind
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    can explain the social and
    communication problems.
  • Not Synced
    So if you struggle with theory of mind,
    if you have a lack of theory of mind,
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    it can explain some of these things.
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    Like i said, theory of mind
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    is the ability to recognize and attribute
    mental states, thoughts, perceptions,
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    desires, intentions, and feelings
    to oneself and to others.
  • Not Synced
    So it's about being able to understand
  • Not Synced
    that somebody else has got a different
    perspective on a scene than you.
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    TIME 10:00
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    The next study that we are
    looking at is by Baron -Cohen.
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    When it says t, it means that there has been three or more researchers.
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    If there's one research, it'll say the researcher's name, if there's two, it will say the two researchers name, for example, Loftus and Palmer.
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    But if there's been three or more, we usually put t.
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    Barn Cohen and all.
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    It's done in 19 n seven.
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    And it is looking at autism and something called theory of mind.
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    I'm just going to go through some key terms through a bit of background to make sure you make notes on the background information, and then we'll look at this today.
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    So Autism.
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    Autism is a developmental disorder, and it affects the social functioning of individuals.
  • Not Synced
    It looks at how individuals can have impairments in several areas related to their ability to function socially, communicate, socially, things like that.
  • Not Synced
    If you have autism, you're on what is known as a spectrum.
  • Not Synced
    There isn't just one type of autism, and everybody who has autism has that type of autism, if you will.
  • Not Synced
    What it is is there's a spectrum.
  • Not Synced
    When you're talking about a spectrum, it means a range.
  • Not Synced
    The autistic spectrum refers to a range of disorders, which consist along a continuum from mildly affected to severely affected.
  • Not Synced
    So This is what your autistic spectrum might look like.
  • Not Synced
    It's a continuum.
  • Not Synced
    A continuum means you could fall along here.
  • Not Synced
    It's not categories, you're in this category, or you're in this category, or you're in this category.
  • Not Synced
    It means that you could fall here or here or here or here, you could be anywhere along that continuum.
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    You could be mildly affected.
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    Individuals who have things like high functioning autism and aspergs, in this mildly affected.
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    Region.
  • Not Synced
    It might mean that you've got an average IQ or slightly above average IQ.
  • Not Synced
    It might mean that you have some extreme ability in some areas.
  • Not Synced
    We have something called autistic servants who have particular abilities, particular skills that they are incredibly skilled at, so memorizing large amounts of numbers or memorizing what city looks like from above, things like that.
  • Not Synced
    But it doesn't actually really affect your learning in a particular severe way.
  • Not Synced
    Whereas this end of the spectrum, is what's known as a severe learning disability.
  • Not Synced
    This is where you find classic autism.
  • Not Synced
    Where your learn and skills are massively affected.
  • Not Synced
    Asperger syndrome is when an individual is at the milder end, if you will of the spectrum.
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    That's not to say mild end.
  • Not Synced
    That's not to say it's not affecting you at all, obviously, it is, but it's known as the milder end of the spectrum.
  • Not Synced
    It means that they have problems with social interaction, but they have generally normal levels of cognitive development.
  • Not Synced
    We've got high-functioning autism
    and then Asperger syndrome.
  • Not Synced
    Now, there's a concept called theory of mind.
  • Not Synced
    Theory of mind is having the ability to understand so that other people have independent minds of their own.
  • Not Synced
    It allows us to understand and predict what other people think and feel basically.
  • Not Synced
    I'm going to talk a bit more about theory of mind in a moment.
  • Not Synced
    But it's basically understanding that somebody else has a mind than you, they know other things than you, they've seen other things than you.
  • Not Synced
    They feel other things than you.
  • Not Synced
    There's a few things that we're going to talk about when it comes to autism.
  • Not Synced
    Some of these we're going to look at and lesson.
  • Not Synced
    Half 1 million people in the UK have autism.
  • Not Synced
    Boys are four times more likely to receive a diagnosis than girls.
  • Not Synced
    The statistics of autism is that there are boys for every one girl that has autism.
  • Not Synced
    There's a number of things that people have linked to autism as a factor or a cause.
  • Not Synced
    There's this continuing debate about whether autism is caused by nature? Is it something that you're born with? Is it to do with your genetics or your neurological development, or is it nurture? Is it things like how your parents raise you? Is it something that is picked up in your environment like a bacterial infection? Is it due to being around people who smoke? Or your mother smoking, is it due to being in a place where there's lots of air pollution or where there's lots of pesticides, or is it due with something like your parent like the age of your parent, something that's within the environment.
  • Not Synced
    You're going to research some of these in lesson, but there's a whole different argument there.
  • Not Synced
    But essentially, people who are on the autistic spectrum, always known as a triad of impairments.
  • Not Synced
    The triad of impairments, if you are on that spectrum.
  • Not Synced
    You have difficulties in these three areas.
  • Not Synced
    You can have difficulties in social communication.
  • Not Synced
    These are things like not understanding facial gestures, non verbal communication.
  • Not Synced
    They may use a set of phrases repeatedly.
  • Not Synced
    They may have difficulties with verbal and non verbal communication and they may repeat what other people say.
  • Not Synced
    Social interaction is another area, which may be impaired in.
  • Not Synced
    That might be things like difficulty in forming relationships.
  • Not Synced
    They don't necessarily want to have eye contact or might not want to be touched, may have difficulty in expressing themselves to others like I currently am.
  • Not Synced
    The last area of your trade is social imagination.
  • Not Synced
    You may find it difficult to imagine how others are feeling or wanting to engage in pretend play with others.
  • Not Synced
    That's things like putting yourself in somebody else's shoes or understanding other people's perspectives or playing role play games like imagination games.
  • Not Synced
    If you've ever watched any programs or films with somebody who is on the autisy spectrum in, you might see a few of these things.
  • Not Synced
    So if you have, I'd encourage you to watch those again now and see if you can pick any of those things up.
  • Not Synced
    There's things like the datable is a program which has raised a lot of awareness of people with autism and with Aspergers, and you quite often see things like having a set of phrases that they use repeatedly.
  • Not Synced
    I think there's a feller on there that says exactly all the time.
  • Not Synced
    He'll finish the sentence and say exactly.
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    I'll say something else later on, exactly.
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    Even if nobody responded to, he'll have that phrase that he uses quite consistently.
  • Not Synced
    I there's that repeating what other people say.
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    If ebodys ever seen a rain man.
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    There's a couple of seeds in there which really display that.
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    If you have difficulties in all three of these areas, right there in the middle, that's you.
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    You'd be on the autistic spectrum.
  • Not Synced
    Don't necessarily go, Oh, that's me, which a lot of students do.
  • Not Synced
    They'll say, I don't like making eye contact, so I must be autistic.
  • Not Synced
    That's not the case.
  • Not Synced
    You have to have some level of impairment in three areas.
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    Don't self diagnose is the lesson.
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    Theory of mind.
  • Not Synced
    If you lack theory of mind, it's known as a cognitive deficit.
  • Not Synced
    This is Baron Cohen, who conducted the study, ECL with his friends.
  • Not Synced
    He suggests that problems with developing theory of mind can explain the social and communication problems.
  • Not Synced
    If you struggle with theory of mind, if you have a lack of theory of mind, it can explain some of these things.
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    Okay.
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    So like I said, theory of mind is the ability to recognize and attribute mental states, thoughts, perceptions, desires, intentions, and feelings to oneself and to others.
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    So it's about Being able to understand that somebody else has got a different perspective on a scene than you.
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    TIME 10:00
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    If one person stood
    on one side of the room
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    and another is stood in a completely
    different side of the room,
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    they're going to see the lesson
    from a different perspective.
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    They'll see different things
    happen than you.
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    It's about understanding
    that that's what they've seen,
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    and this is what you've seen,
    and they're different.
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    They haven't seen exactly
    the same thing as you.
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    Or about understanding
    other people's intentions.
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    So somebody hurts you,
    but they didn't mean to,
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    it was accidental.
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    But can you understand
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    that their intention was to
    help you not to harm you?
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    So in order to interact with
    people in a “normal way,”
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    you need to be able to understand
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    how the things that you say
    might affect somebody,
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    how it might make them
    think and them feel,
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    but also understand the reasoning behind what they say.
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    So if you come into the room
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    and you're wearing
    a particularly ugly jumper,
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    I might be thinking,
    “Well, that's an ugly jumper,”
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    but I wouldn't say,
    “What an ugly jumper,”
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    because that would hurt your feelings.
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    So I might just go,
    “Is that a new jumper?
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    It's a nice jumper,”
    something like that.
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    That's because I have an
    awareness of your feelings,
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    and I have an awareness
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    that what I say could
    affect you in this way.
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    If I say, “What an ugly jumper,”
    you might take it as a joke,
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    or you might actually have
    your feelings hurt by that.
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    Now, somebody
    who lacks theory of mind
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    might not necessarily be able
    to make that connection.
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    So if I said, “What a nice jumper,”
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    they might think,
    “That's not a nice jumper, though.
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    It’s a bit of an ugly jumper.”
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    and wouldn't understand
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    that my intention is to avoid
    hurting somebody's feelings.
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    So that might be one example.
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    TIME 11:52 @ 6:40
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    I think sometimes, particularly in the media,
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    you see people who are
    autistic and on the spectrum
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    appearing to look like
    they hurt people's feelings.
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    You see that quite often in TV shows.
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    That's again, having
    a lack of theory of mind,
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    potentially affecting how we understand
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    the things that we say
    can affect somebody else.
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    There's just a couple of examples there.
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    So there's several experiments
    that have been conducted
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    to show that people with autism
    struggle to employ a theory of mind
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    and struggle to use theory
    of mind and develop it, okay?
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    There's really a classic example
    I'm just going to run through with you.
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    This is the Sally Anne Test.
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    In the Sally Anne Test,

    you can do what’s called a first-order
    and a second-order theory of mind test.
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    This is what the Sally Anne Test looks like.
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    This is Sally,
    and Sally's got a basket.
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    And this is Ann,
    and Ann has a box.
    ,
    So Sally has a marble.
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    She puts the marble into her basket,
    and Sally goes out for a walk.
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    Now Anne takes the marble out of
    the basket and puts it into the box.
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    Now Sally comes back and
    she wants to play with her marble.
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    Where will Sally look for her marble?
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    This is a first-order test of theory of mind,
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    so it's testing whether you could
    understand somebody else's perspective.
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    So can you understand the world in
    this scenario from Sally's perspective?
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    Where will Sally look for her marble?
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    I want you to think and I want you
    to just say out loud to yourself right now
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    where you think Sally
    will look for her marble.
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    Now, a normal 4-year-old child,
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    (and hopefully you) will correctly
    state that Sally will look in her basket.
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    That's the last place that she
    left her marble (in her basket),
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    so she's going to look
    for her marble in her basket.
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    Now what we often find
    is that children with autism
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    often say that Sally
    will look in Anne's box.
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    They struggle to employ theory of mind
    and understand things
    from Sally's point of view.
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    Their awareness is that
    that marble is in that box.
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    They struggle to use theory of mind
    in the sense of understanding
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    that Sally hasn't seen
    the scene that we've just seen
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    (for lack of a better sentence).
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    “ Sally hasn't seen the scene
    that we've just seen.” [chuckles]
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    Sally doesn't know that while
    she's been out of the room,
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    Anne is going to take that
    marble and put it in her box.
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    If you're passing the theory of mind test,
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    you're going to say Sally is
    going to look in the basket.
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    If you are not going to pass the test,
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    you say that she's going to look in the box.
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    Now, the second-order
    test is very similar,
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    but then Sally comes back
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    and instead of asking,
    “Where will Sally look?”
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    you ask, “Where will Anne
    think that Sally will look?”
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    In your second-order test,
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    you're not only viewing things
    from somebody else's perspective,
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    but you're looking at
    that person's perspective
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    of another person's perspective.
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    So from Anne's perspective,
    where does she think Sally will look?
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    So again, a normal 6-year-old child
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    will correctly state that
    she'll look in a basket,
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    because they know that Anne
    is aware that Sally doesn't know

    that [Anne] has moved the marble.
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    But adults with Asperger's Syndrome
    have also been shown to pass this test.
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    We're saying that adults with autism have a lack of theory of mind,
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    and we've seen that in children
    with this Sally Anne Test.
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    But then what we're saying is,
    an adult can pass this test as well,
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    even though they've got Asperger’s
    or they're on the autistic spectrum.
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    So does this mean that they
    have developed theory of mind,
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    or does this mean that there's
    a problem with the test?
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    Now, what Baron-Cohen suggests
    is that there's a problem with the test.
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    He argues that passing this test,
    this second-order theory of mind test,
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    doesn't show that people
    with autism have theory of mind.
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    It says that these tests are designed
    for 4- to 6-year-old children.
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    It only shows that adults with autism
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    have the equivalent theory
    of mind as a 6-year-old child.
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    It's not necessarily showing
    that they have theory of mind,
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    that they have a good
    level of theory of mind.
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    It's showing that their theory of mind
    is equivalent to that of a 6-year-old child
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    because they've passed it,
    and a 6-year-old child can pass it.
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    Okay? This is known as a ceiling effect.
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    This test only measures as high
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    as the theory of mind skills
    of a normal 6-year-old child.
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    That's the ceiling on this test is the
    normal theory of mind of a 6-year-old child.
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    Baron-Cohen suggested that
    different tests need to be employed
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    in order to test whether adults
    with autism and Asperger's Syndrome
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    can actually use theory of mind.
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    There's some other tests that have already been designed for autism
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    and for theory of mind.
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    Sally Anne is one,
    but we've got some different ones.
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    So Happé's Strange Stories is another.
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    Happé developed an advanced
    test of theory of mind.
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    So it's called advanced because
    it's trying to reduce that ceiling effect.
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    Children are read stories,
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    then they're questioned
    about the characters.
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    It's called Happé’s Strange Stories
    because it's like unique scenarios.
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    These stories have characters who will
    do things like, they will pretend play,
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    they will joke, they will tell white lies,
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    things like “That's a nice jumper”
    when it's an ugly jumper.
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    They will use figure of speech,
    things like “raining cats and dogs.”
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    They will use irony.
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    These are called mental stories
    or mentalistic stories.
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    So If the children had trouble answering
    the questions about the stories,
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    then they were said
    to lack theory of mind
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    when they're compared to match controls.
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    Because these require you
    to use some abstract thought,
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    some imagination, somebody else's perspective, things like that,
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    it requires a certain level
    of theory of mind.
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    Baron-Cohen used Happé Strange Stories as well as developing his own test.
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    Baron-Cohen wanted
    to create a functioning test
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    of theory of mind for adults.
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    The tests that exist at the moment
    don't really function very well for adults.
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    There's still that ceiling effect there.
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    So he had a few research questions.
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    Would adults with high-functioning autism
    (people who don't have severe
    autism) and Asperger syndrome)
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    be impaired on a theory of mind task
    designed for adults specifically?
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    Would females be better than males
    at mind reading or at using theory of mind?
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    Theory of mind is sometimes
    informally called “mind reading”
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    because it's requiring you
    to think sort of think about
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    what somebody else is thinking,
    think about their perspective.
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    TIME 20:00 @ 10:00 PM Mon 12/30
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    They thought that females
    were better at this than males.
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    This is a commonly held belief
    that women are more able to understand other people's perspectives.
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    Then Baron-Cohen also hypothesized
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    that adults with autism will have
    a specific deficit of theory of mind.
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    They conducted a quasi experiment.
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    It's a quasi because you've got
    an independent variable,
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    which is the type of person.
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    They had three groups of people.
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    They had adults with high-functioning autism and Asperger’s,
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    they had normal adults,
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    and they had adults with Tourette’s Syndrome.
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    And it's naturally occurring.
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    So they all already were either
    on the autistic spectrum
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    or they had Tourette’s
    or they were normal.
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    Then the dependent variable is
    measured,
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    so the performance is
    a score on the Eyes Task.
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    Baron-Cohen developed a brand
    new task called the Eyes Task
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    to measure theory of mind.
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    All participants were tested individually,
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    It was in a quiet room that was either in their own home, in the researcher’s clinic,
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    or in the lab at Cambridge University.
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    Sample: So we've got our three groups.
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    The first group, we have 16 individuals
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    with high-functioning
    autism or Asperger’s.
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    So we’ve got-- 4 of these participants
    have high-functioning autism,
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    12 have Asperger’s.
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    There was 13 males and 3 females
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    and all of them were
    of normal intelligence.
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    They were recruited through an advert
    in the National Autistic magazine
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    and a wide variety of clinical sources,
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    but the main bit is the advert
    in the autistic magazine.
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    Then you've got 50 normal
    age-matched adults.
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    Don't feel harsh about
    calling them “normal.”
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    You have to call them normal.
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    That's what they referred to in the study.
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    It means neurotypical.
    rather than normal.
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    There's no such thing as normal,
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    but they're called the normal group in this study.
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    So it means individuals
    with no neurological disorder.
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    There's 25 males, 25 females,
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    and they were drawn from the subject
    panel of the university department,
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    compromising of the general
    population of Cambridge.
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    There were no members of the university,
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    but the subject panel drew them.
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    Then you've got your third group.
    This is 10 adults with Tourette’s.

    They were also age-matched.
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    The sex ratio was 8-to-2,
    so 8 males, 2 females.
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    They were all of normal intelligence,
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    and they were all recruited
    from a referral center in London.
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    All three groups ended up age-matched.
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    Obviously, we're interested
    in the autistic group
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    and if the autistic group
    show a lack of theory of mind.
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    Now, we need to also know
    why we've then got three groups.
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    So why have participants without autism?
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    You need to have participants without
    autism because they're a control group.
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    You always need to have
    a control group as a baseline
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    whenever you do experiments.
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    Realistically, that's the best thing to do.
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    Because if you have a group that
    do not have the neurological disorder,
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    or if you're doing caffeine and memory,
    have no caffeine,
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    that gives you a baseline of what
    theory of mind should look like,
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    or what memory should look like when
    you're not using caffeine, things like that.
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    In this case, it's what theory
    of mind should look like.
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    What level of theory of mind should you have?
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    We can use this to compare
    to the other two groups,
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    and that tells us whether the other
    two groups are abnormal in any way.
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    But why have participants
    with Tourette’s Syndrome?
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    Tourette’s Syndrome
    is a neurological disorder,
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    and it's characterized by things like tics
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    and sudden involuntary
    movements and vocalizations.
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    So it's things like physical
    bodily movements,
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    like the twitch of an arm.
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    You can sometimes see people
    that have one with physical tics,
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    TIME 25:00 @ 9:30 Tues 12/31
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    it might be like
    a facial spasm might be a tic,
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    or I've seen people before
    that have tics in their limbs,
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    so it might be that there's a tic,
    that arm goes in the air
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    and then it won't come
    down for a little bit.
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    It's all involuntary.
    They've got no control of that.
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    Or it could be vocal.
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    So often people think that people
    with Tourette’s just swear,
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    and sometimes they swear
    but it's not just swearing.
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    Often, it's things which are
    inappropriate for the moment.
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    So it could be things like swearing
    or it could just say random words
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    but words that are relevant to that person.
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    So I don't know if anybody watches E4, but there's a lady that presents for E4.
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    She does the-- like the talking bit
    when you're introducing the next show.
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    And one of her tics is,
    she says “thunder cats.”
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    So often, she'll go “thunder cats”
    between things that she says.
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    It's not like a swear word,
    but that's a tic, it’s involuntary.
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    She's got no control over that.
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    The reason why participants
    with Tourette’s were chosen
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    was because they're similar to
    autistic participants in a lot of ways.
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    These conditions,
    they both affect social interaction.
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    and they're both
    developmental disorders,
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    more males rather than females
    have these disorders,
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    but neither one affects intelligence.
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    I think people have tried
    to make comparisons before
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    with things like Down syndrome,
    which can affect intelligence.
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    Whereas we know that high-functioning autism and Asperger’s and Tourette’s
  • Not Synced
    have no effect with
    intelligence whatsoever.
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    We can't say that any differences
    are based on intelligence,
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    just on these disorders.
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    Theory of mind should affect
    only participants with autism
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    and not Tourette’s.
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    So by comparing the two groups,
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    we can see whether having
    a lack of theory of mind
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    is characteristic of having autism
    or being on the autistic spectrum
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    rather than just having any
    neurological or developmental disorder.
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    So in this study, four tasks
    are completed in this study.
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    Four tasks.
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    So we have a set of control tasks.
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    Control tasks, similar to a control group, are looking for baseline measurements.
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    The control tasks here are to ensure
    that the participants with autism
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    were lacking only theory of mind
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    and they're not lacking things
    like basic cognitive functions,
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    like basic intelligences, basic abilities.
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    The two tasks are gender recognition
    and basic emotion.
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    In the gender recognition tasks,
    participants are looking at photos
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    and they're stating the gender
    of the person in the photo.
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    The task controls for face perception,
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    perceptual discrimination,
    and social perception.
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    In other words, none of these things could affect whether they suggested
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    that they were male or female.
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    Then you've got your basic
    emotion recognition task.
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    Again, they're looking at photos of faces,
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    and they're stating what basic
    emotion the person was feeling,
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    identified by a psychologist called Ekman.
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    They had choices of things like basic emotions
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    being happy, sad, fear,
    anger, surprise, disgust.
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    They're checking whether
    difficulties on the Eyes Task
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    were due to theory of mind
    and that being in lack,
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    or difficulties with these basic
    emotional recognition skills.
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    Those are the two control tasks.
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    And then you've got two experimental tasks.
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    After the control tests are completed,
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    every participant in all three conditions completed these two experimental tasks.
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    We've got the Eyes Task.
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    So the Eyes Task was
    developed by Baron-Cohen,
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    and I'm going to tell you a bit more
    about how that's developed.
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    This is the test that they developed
    to see if it was suitable for adults.
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    It's a test of theory of mind
    and Happé's Strange Stories.
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    Happé's Strange Stories
    we've already talked about.
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    This was to compare the results
    of the new Eyes Task
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    to see if there was a link between the two.
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    TIME 30:00 @ 11:07 on Tues 12/31
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    We know the Happé's Strange
    Stories test for theory of mind,
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    but there is a bit of a ceiling effect with it.
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    So what we're doing is,
    we're taking this Eyes Task
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    in which we're saying
    there's no ceiling effect,
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    it's suitable for adults.
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    So if participants struggle
    with the Eyes Task,
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    and then they also struggle
    with Happé's Strange Stories,
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    we can be fairly confident that these
    two tests are testing the same thing.
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    So we know that they struggle
    with Happé's Strange Stories,
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    which test theory of mind.
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    They're struggling with the Eyes Task,
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    so we can also assume that
    that is testing theory of mind,
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    and that is known as concurrent validity.
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    If participants struggle with one task,
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    they should also struggle with another
    task that tests the same construct.
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    Same idea.
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    To summarize what I've said so far, you've got three groups:
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    high-functioning autism and Asperger’s,
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    you've got a Tourette’s group,
    you've got a control group
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    and you've got four tasks that they're doing.
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    You've got gender recognition,
    basic emotion, Eyes Task,
  • Not Synced
    and Happé's Strange Stories.
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    The first two are control;
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    the second two are theory of mind
    or experimental tasks.
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    So the Eyes Task.
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    We'll go through how
    the Eyes Task worked.
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    In this test of theory of mind,
  • Not Synced
    they looked at black-and-white
    photographs of eyes for 3 seconds.
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    So there's 25 pairs
    of black-and-white eyes.
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    They were 10 by 15 centimeters.
    Each was displayed for 3 seconds.
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    Now, with each photo,
    two words appeared:
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    one was a target word
    and one was the foil word.
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    The target word was the accurate
    description
    of how the person was feeling.
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    If the person was feeling happy in that photo,
    the target word might have been “happy.”

    The foil word is incorrect.
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    The foil word (usually the opposite)
    might have been “sad.”
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    Participants were asked:
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    “Which word best describes what
    this person is thinking or feeling?”
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    Participants had to choose
    what they thought was the correct word
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    before moving on to
    the next eyes photograph.
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    They're looking and it for 3 seconds,
  • Not Synced
    and they’ve got to pick between
    the target and the foil word.
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    There's an example of what it looked like.
  • Not Synced
    So which word describes
    what this person is best feeling?
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    Friendly or hostile?
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    When it came to choosing the photos,

    we needed to make sure that this
    was a valid test and it's free of bias.
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    So all these photos were
    collected from magazines.
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    We have four judges, so two male
    judges and two female judges
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    that looked at each photograph
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    and decided on the target
    and the foil word for each one.
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    Now, to make sure again that this
    is valid and that there's no bias,
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    what we do is, we've tested this
    on a panel of eight other people.
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    So they had to further agree
    on which word was the target
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    and which word was the foil,
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    They were checking that the task
    was an appropriate level,
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    that the words used
    (both the target and foil)
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    are understandable and that they match.
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    So this improves the validity of that task.
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    There's a couple of examples there
    of pairs of words that we use.
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    So friendly or hostile, sad thought/
    happy thought, calm/anxious,
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    sympathetic/unsympathetic,
    concerned/unconcerned.
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    Just a few examples.
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    When the groups had taken part in these tests,
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    they found that in the control tasks,
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    all the participants in
    the autism and Asperger’s group
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    scored highly in the control task,
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    suggesting that they had
    basic cognitive functioning.
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    In other words, on these control tasks,
    there'd be no difference between
    the autistic and Asperger’s group
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    compared to the normal adults
    and the adults with Tourette’s.
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    But the group that has
    high-functioning autism or Asperger’s
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    made significantly more errors on
    the [Happé's] Strange Stories task
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    than either of the other groups.
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    When they're being asked questions about the [Happé's] Strange Stories,
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    if you're in that high-functioning
    autism Asperger’s group,
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    you're making more errors.
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    Now, when it came to the Eyes Task,
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    what we did was, we took the mean score
    (the mean number that they got correct).
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    The mean score on the Eyes Task for adults
    with autism or Asperger’s, was 16.3;
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    compared to normal people, which was 20.3;
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    and adults with Tourette’s, which was 20.4.
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    The mean score for adults with Tourette’s
  • Not Synced
    was not significantly different from normal adults,
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    but both were significantly higher
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    than those with high-functioning
    autism or Asperger’s.
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    Now, remember, another question
    that Baron-Cohen wanted to answer
  • Not Synced
    was whether there was any basis
    to the commonly held belief
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    that females were better than males
    at mind reading or using theory of mind.
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    Using the results from the control
    group only, (so from the normal group),
  • Not Synced
    they got the following results.
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    The mean score on the Eyes Task
    is that the normal males scored 18.8;
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    and the normal females scored 21.8.
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    Normal females performed significantly better
    than normal males on the Eyes Task.
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    But the normal males were
    still significantly better
  • Not Synced
    than the group with high-functioning autism and Asperger’s.
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    Normal males don't have as good a level of theory of mind as normal females,
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    but they've still got a
    better level of theory of mind
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    than those in the high-function
    autism and Asperger’s group.
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    Now, within the autism and Asperger’s group,
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    there was no significant correlation
    between IQ and performance on the task.
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    We know it's completely separate from IQ.
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    It's just to do with having autism
    or being on the autistic spectrum.
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    On Happé's Strange Stories,
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    no participants with Tourette’s
    syndrome made any errors;
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    but those with autism and Asperger’s were
    significantly impaired, making many errors.
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    So this study concludes that adults
    with autism had difficulty on the Eyes Task
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    and made errors on the [Happé's] Strange Stories.
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    This suggests that adults,
    as well as children with autism,
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    find it difficult to attribute
    theory of mind to others,
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    so they lack theory of mind, in other words,
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    struggle to understand things
    from other people's perspectives.
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    Now, contrary to previous research with adults,
    these results seem to provide evidence
  • Not Synced
    that adults with autism or Asperger’s
    do possess an impaired theory of mind.
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    Unlike things like the Sally Anne test,
    which says that adults with Asperger’s
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    can pass a second-order theory of mind test,
    the same as a 6-year-old normal child.
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    This is suggesting, well, actually,
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    they've still got an impaired
    theory of mind level here.
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    As some of the high-function
    autism and Asperger’s group
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    hold university degrees and
    were all of normal intelligence,
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    it is reasonable to suggest
    that theory of mind deficits
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    are independent of general intelligence.
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    That is the study by Baron-Cohen.
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    In your next lesson, what we are
    going to do is, I'll check your notes.
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    There's quite a lot of information here,
    so you should have made quite thorough notes,
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    and I'm also going to go through
    the study with you again,
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    and we're going to evaluate the study.
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Title:
Baron Cohen et al. (1997): Adults with Autism (functioning test of theory of mind)
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
38:33

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