Noah Sasson Profile picture
Aug 22, 2019 16 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Do first impressions of autistic adults differ between neurotypical (NT) and autistic observers? Our new paper led by @kmdebrabander (now out at #AutisminAdulthood) addresses this question & is full of interesting findings. Here are some of the highlights. liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/au…
Our lab has shown that NTs often form negative 1st impressions of autistic adults and are reluctant to interact with them, which creates barriers to social inclusion. Thankfully, these impressions improve when NTs have high autism knowledge or are made aware of their diagnosis.
Autistic adults, of course, tend to have high familiarity with autism and are often more adept than NTs at inferring autistic intentions and mental states. As a result, their first impressions of other autistic adults might be expected to be more favorable than those made by NTs.
In this study, 32 autistic and 32 NT adults viewed brief videos of 20 autistic and 20 NT unfamiliar adults and then rated them on character traits and their interest in interacting with them. Sometimes we provided their diagnostic status and sometimes we withheld it.
Consistent with our prior work, NTs evaluated autistic adults less favorably than NT adults. Autistic raters, meanwhile, were more favorable than NT raters overall but just like their NT counterparts, they rated autistic adults less favorably than NT adults on several traits.
Autistic raters therefore were just as sensitive to detecting social presentation differences displayed by autistic adults as NTs were and also evaluated them similarly. Such findings are inconsistent with social cognitive deficit interpretations of autistic social understanding.
It also suggests that simply being autistic doesn’t by itself result in more favorable impressions of other autistic adults. Instead, autistic adults may share the NT negativity bias towards autistic differences, perhaps reflecting an internalization of broader cultural norms.
When and how these negative biases develop is an open question. If first impressions are more favorable towards autistic people early in childhood, this may suggest that, with age, NT and autistic individuals gradually adopt explicit and implicit cultural attitudes about autism.
However, in contrast to theories about reduced social motivation in autism, we also found that autistic raters expressed greater interest than NT raters in hanging out with the people in the videos, and this effect was largest when those they were viewing were autistic.
So despite sharing the NT tendency to evaluate autistic adults less positively, autistic raters did not appear to judge these traits as an impediment to social interaction the way that their NT counterparts did. They were, in a sense, less discriminatory and more inclusive.
Providing raters with the diagnostic status of the people in the videos improved 1st impressions of autistic adults made by NT raters but not autistic raters. NT raters likely use the diagnosis as an explanation for what they perceive to be atypical social styles and behaviors.
Autistic raters, meanwhile, either already inferred the diagnostic status of autistic adults even when no diagnosis was provided, or for them the diagnosis was simply less relevant to forming first impressions. The one exception to this finding was on the rating of “awkwardness”.
Autistic raters actually evaluated autistic adults as*more* awkward when their diagnosis was provided. Autistic raters may be highly cognizant and sensitive about autism being associated with awkwardness, and providing a diagnostic label may have increased its salience.
This is speculative, but perceptions of awkwardness may be particularly salient to autistic adults, who are more aware than others about how autistic traits can be judged and stigmatized. This is one reason some partake in masking behaviors to avoid negative responses.
In summary, we found that autistic adults detected and evaluated autistic social presentation differences similarly to NT adults, but these less favorable judgments did not diminish their interest in potential social interaction with autistic individuals the way it did for NTs.
Feel free to email or DM me if you’d like a pdf of the full paper!

Big thanks to @kmdebrabander, @DesiRJones, @DanielFaso, Kerrianne Morrison, and Mike Chmielewski from @SMUPsychology for their great work on this. Also thanks as always to @nPforAutism for their assistance!

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More from @Noahsasson

May 4, 2021
Very proud of @kmdebrabander for her #INSAR2021 poster “Autistic Adults Accurately Detect Social Disinterest in their Conversation Partners when Non-Autistic Adults Do Not”. A🧵about our findings, which pretty clearly don’t align with a social cognitive deficit model of autism!
Data in this study are drawn from an earlier project by Kerrianne Morrison who found (among other things) that non-autistic adults-- but not autistic ones-- express low social interest for future interaction with autistic people they just met.
journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.117…
In the study detailed in Kilee's poster, we asked participants after their conversations to predict how their partner would evaluate their character traits and their interest in interacting with them again in the future.
Read 9 tweets
Jan 21, 2021
NEW PAPER led by @DesiRJones: non-autistic (NA) adults often hold negative implicit & explicit biases about autism that create barriers for autistic people and harm their personal & professional well-being. We wanted to see if we could reduce them. journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/13…
Our rationale: putting the onus exclusively on autistic people to “normalize”, mask their autism to fit in, and/or disclose their diagnosis hoping that it’ll be beneficial absolves NA people from working towards greater acceptance and accommodation.
Attitudes about autism are highly variable among NA people. Those w/ more autism familiarity & knowledge tend to hold less stigma and be more inclusive. This suggests that increasing them in NA adults might help promote greater autism acceptance.
Read 17 tweets
Jan 2, 2021
Before we get too far into 2021, I thought I’d write a thread recapping some of the research that came out of my lab in 2020. Most of this work was led by my talented team of graduate students, Kerrianne Morrison, @kmdebrabander, and @DesiRJones.
Back in January, a news story was published about Kerrianne’s study showing improved social interaction outcomes for autistic adults when paired with another autistic partner. utdallas.edu/news/health-me…
A detailed thread about the study and a link to the paper can be found here (feel free to DM me your email address if you’d like a copy of the full paper for this study or any of our studies):
Read 13 tweets
Nov 25, 2020
A thread about our new open-access paper, just out today. We tested how well standardized measures of social cognition, social skill, and social motivation predict real-world social interaction outcomes for autistic and non-autistic (NA) adults. frontiersin.org/articles/10.33…
First some background: a deficit model of autism assumes that autistic adults often struggle in interactions w/ NA adults because they have poor or less normative social abilities. Surprisingly this assumption is rarely tested. Seems important to do!
Many psychosocial treatments of autism implicitly use a deficit framing, presuming that training autistic adults to mimic more “typical” social behavior will lead to better real-world social success & life outcomes but this seldom happens in practice.
Read 21 tweets
Dec 11, 2019
In our new paper out today, autistic adults held a “get to know you” conversation with an unfamiliar autistic or typically-developing (TD) person. We were curious: would social interaction outcomes differ when their partner was also autistic? THREAD journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.11…
Most studies attempting to understand social disability in autism focus exclusively on individual characteristics, like social cognitive ability (e.g., theory of mind). This presumes that social interaction difficulties in autism are driven solely by the autistic person.
But social interaction by definition involves more than one person, and relational dynamics— in which each person influences and is influenced by the other— is key to understanding determinants of partner compatibility and social quality.
Read 20 tweets
Mar 8, 2019
We have a new paper! Led by my student Kerrianne Morrison (w/@kmdebrabander & @DanielFaso) we find that impressions of autistic adults made by neurotypicals (NT) are driven more by characteristics of the NT perceiver than by those of the ASD target. THREAD journals.sagepub.com/eprint/3B4RadK…
Our group (along with Ruth Grossman and @DanKennedyIU ) had previously found that NTs rate autistic adults less favorably than NT controls on many traits, and are less inclined to want to subsequently interact with them. 2/ nature.com/articles/srep4…
In a follow up paper, we found that impressions improve when NTs are informed that the person they are evaluating has a diagnosis of autism, presumably because they have an explanation for behaviors they perceive as atypical. 3/ journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.117…
Read 14 tweets

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