Research  People with autism less likely to succumb to bystander effect?

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C C Offline
People with autism less likely to succumb to bystander effect, York U father-son research duo finds
https://www.yorku.ca/news/2023/10/26/peo...duo-finds/

PRESS RELEASE: A well-established psychological theory states that most of us are less likely to intervene in a bad situation if other people are present, and this ‘bystander effect’ also applies to workplace settings. However, new research led by York University shows that people with autism are less likely to be affected by this social contagion than neurotypical people. They are less likely to stay silent in the face of gross misconduct or even just everyday mistakes, pointing to the positive aspects of autism and how organizations can benefit from hiring more neurodivergent people, findings reveal.

“Our study shows that to the extent that they would act if they saw something wrong, employees with autism were much more likely to intervene, regardless of the number of people present. And in situations where they would not intervene, they were more likely to identify the influence of others as the reason, whereas neurotypical employees were more reluctant to acknowledge this,” says lead author Lorne Hartman, an instructor with the Schulich School of Business.

Lorne and his son Braxton Hartman, a graduate student in the Faculty of Health at York who was a collaborator on the study, were inspired to look into this issue not only from their academic experience, but also because of personal experience — Braxton has autism and has been a public advocate on the issue since he was 12 years old.

“One of the motivations here is that a lot of the current literature on autism comes from a deficit mindset. It's basically saying these differences in autism are sort of exclusively negatives. We want to reframe that and ask, ‘What are ways that some of these differences could actually be an advantage rather than just a negative?’” says Braxton, whose research also focuses on autism. “One of the core areas that people tend to consider a deficit in autism is in terms of social interaction. We wanted to look at whether this is actually a positive to the extent that people with autism are less influenced by others when it comes to dysfunctional or unethical situations.”

Lorne has a background in clinical psychology and his main area of research looks at unethical behaviour in organizations.

“But most importantly, in all of these cases, there were hundreds, maybe thousands of people who may not have actually been involved in the wrongdoing, but they should have been aware that it was going on,” he says, summarizing his earlier research. “So having people around who are willing to blow the whistle, so to speak, is very important for organizations.”

The study was published this week in the October issue of Autism Research and created with collaborators from the University of Toronto. The research participants — employed individuals, 33 with autism and 34 neurotypical — were asked to weigh in on hypothetical scenarios involving everything from inefficiencies to inequalities to quality concerns.

While the results are preliminary and more research is needed, the researchers say their work has important practical implications, especially considering that the rates of unemployment and underemployment for people with autism may be as high as 90 per cent, and even if they have higher education, that statistic only drops to 70 per cent.

“We’re looking at this from two angles. One is looking at helping organizations be more ethical and efficient, but also, helping people like myself – people on the spectrum – find gainful employment by helping to change the societal understanding of autism,” concludes Braxton.
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#2
Zinjanthropos Offline
Quote:Lorne and his son Braxton Hartman, a graduate student in the Faculty of Health at York who was a collaborator on the study, were inspired to look into this issue not only from their academic experience, but also because of personal experience — Braxton has autism and has been a public advocate on the issue since he was 12 years old.

Sounds a bit like the autistic typing fiasco years back where it turned out that parents were facilitating the typists' fingers.

Quote:The research participants — employed individuals, 33 with autism and 34 neurotypical — were asked to weigh in on hypothetical scenarios involving everything from inefficiencies to inequalities to quality concerns.

Hypothetical? Just don't like the sound of that word for this study. Other than employed, we know nothing of participants. I empathize with the parents, raising autistic kids isn't easy and if there are positives to the 'neural contagion'* then by all means let us know.

I volunteer one day out of the year to watch over autistic kids, it isn't much but personal experience causes me to cast a skeptical eye on the claims made.

*contagion: spreading of a harmful idea or practice or the communication of disease from one person to another. I've never heard of neural contagion but I have heard of emotional, maybe the same thing idk. don't think autism is a disease that's spread from one to another through close contact. Anyways, when reading that word I thought of the autistic employees reacting to/mimicking the others' ideas and thoughts on whatever scenario was being presented. Whole thing sounds like a poor parent wanting more from his child....again idk.
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#3
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(Oct 27, 2023 01:19 PM)Zinjanthropos Wrote: [...] Sounds a bit like the autistic typing fiasco years back where it turned out that parents were facilitating the typists' fingers. [...]

What's astonishing is that facilitated communication is still hanging around or trying to make a comeback with simply a "controversial status" rather than being totally debunked over 25 years ago.

At least, some sort of meandering, agnostic but cautionary stance is the way WebMD and other places seems to be framing it: https://www.webmd.com/brain/autism/what-...munication

Decolonization of knowledge and "radical equality of all cultural beliefs" social justice ideology is poised to unleash hell upon the planet in the ensuing decades, as Western standards are flushed down the drain due to being part of the oppressive canon of European tyranny/imperialism. (Never mind the Antonio Gramsci legacy that's a forefather of these intellectual movements contradictorily being yet another Western product itself.)
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