Cover Image: March 2010 Scientific American Magazine See Inside

Extraordinary Perception

We think of people with autism as having a deficit in cognitive processing—but their distractibility could also result from having enhanced perceptual capabilities














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And that is exactly what they found. As the researchers reported online in the journal Psychological Science, although there was no difference among subjects in either reaction time or accuracy on the main task, those with ASD processed the irrelevant letters while solving much more complex problems. Their reaction times indicated that they were still noticing when the extra letter was an N or X, while also finding the target letter in the ring with the same speed and accuracy as the normal controls. Put another way, they weren’t ignoring the main task, nor were they distracted away from it. Instead they were completing their work and moving on, using their untapped capacity.

But here’s the rub. Although this increased distractibility may be a talent rather than a deficit, the psychologists point out, it nonetheless can have detrimental consequences in real-life situations. Just ask Tim Page about his uncanny facility for bus routes.


This article was originally published with the title Extraordinary Perception.



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ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)

WRAY HERBERT is director of public affairs for the Association for Psychological Science.


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  1. 1. jtdwyer 11:37 AM 3/16/10

    High-functioning Asperger’s sufferers are perhaps justifiably being treated by the psycho-pharmaceutical industry as an ailment. Any significant perceptual distinction is detrimental to successful social interactions.

    However, a case can be made that the enormously broad category of Autism Spectrum Disorders includes functional enhancements that may prove essential to the continued survival of the species. The current functional adaptations have not proven to be sustainable. Perhaps society should be careful not to ‘cure’ all distinguished individuals.

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  2. 2. TTLG 04:23 PM 3/16/10

    Puzzling final paragraph. Since when is remembering landmarks, times and bus route numbers less useful in real-life situations than details of a minor skirmish from 200 years ago? Sounds like these people may actually have a better connection with reality than the scientists studying them.

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  3. 3. frankboase 12:06 AM 3/17/10

    "Why are people like Page so easily distracted from the main act?"
    So we are all clear on what the "main act"....is are we ?

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  4. 4. brerlou 05:17 AM 3/18/10

    The writer of the article seems to be more focused on normal behavior than on useful behavior. The ability to follow instructions and to mimic the mood and normative functioning of the flock may be a good thing, however the questions one might ask of the autistic functioning is, "Is it useful? Can it contribute? History is full of accounts of odd balls and non-conformists who have changed the course of the development of mankind for the better.

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  5. 5. hotblack 02:06 PM 3/18/10

    Typical.

    This european notion that there is one right way that everyone must be made to think and live, and anyone not in line must be coerced, drugged, treated, or somehow changed to fit it.

    Just let people live, dammit.

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  6. 6. jochu 04:49 PM 3/18/10

    "Their reaction times indicated that they were still noticing when the extra letter was an N or X, while also finding the target letter in the ring with the same speed and accuracy as the normal controls."

    maybe i missed something but how does that work?

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  7. 7. jtdwyer in reply to jochu 09:16 PM 3/18/10

    jochu - I interpreted that statement to indicate that those diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome found the target letters both inside and outside the ring with the same that speed that 'normal' participants found only the target letters within the ring, as directed. They were distracted by the extra targets, but still performed the assigned task just as well as others.

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  8. 8. Bops 04:06 AM 3/19/10

    I don't have any problem with people thinking differently. I do have a problem with people who kill or harm other people and animals. They are the ones that we need to do something about.

    Planes would never fly if someone didn't think differently.

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  9. 9. Steve D 03:22 PM 3/19/10

    If people with ASD can process distracting information and still perform assigned tasks, why wasn't Tim Page able to recall bus routes and highways AND the history he learned in Boston? After all, that was the assigned task. When I hear a claim that someone can do "more" than normal people, I expect them to do, well, more.

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  10. 10. CCCWood in reply to Steve D 11:09 AM 3/23/10

    Steve D, as a teacher who now has several students a day on the spectrum, I can tell you that the history was learned, but not specifically solicited. Likely the teacher asked students to "write about what you learned during the field trip", and didn't specifically ask that students write about the historical aspects of their trip. The new buzz word in education is "differentiation", and that's what teacher back-in-the-day were probably not required to do.

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  11. 11. corticalchaos in reply to Bops 11:40 AM 4/1/10

    "I do have a problem with people who kill or harm other people and animals."
    Oh, you mean like farmers?

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  12. 12. Dynamite 03:24 PM 4/27/10

    It all rather illustrates that the epistemology of Asperger's syndrome is a complete mess. The diagnostic criteria are vague and various character traits keep being tacked on as though to try to make it more determinate as a syndrome, but they only serve to muddy the waters because they are not always consistent -- particularly on the issue of the whole axis of intuition and creativity. Carving up humanity with a system of psychiatric labeling is rather repugnant in any case.
    Recommended reading: 'Asperger's is Just a racket': http://racketaspergers.blogspot.com/

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  13. 13. AussieAspie in reply to Steve D 05:17 PM 7/11/10

    Steve D - Asperger's deal very well with concrete concepts but not with abstracts. If the teacher asked specifically about the historical event, writing about it wouldn't have posed a problem. This essay simply showed what Page found noteworthy on that excursion, but the historical event was still mentioned albeit briefly.

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  14. 14. agenthucky in reply to Bops 01:00 PM 8/11/10

    "Planes would never fly if someone didn't think differently."

    Planes have always flown, we wouldn't have planes if someone didn't think differently

    no?

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  15. 15. agenthucky in reply to Steve D 01:03 PM 8/11/10

    Perhaps specific question could have been answered if he decided to use that information he gathered. Perhaps his opinion of what the most important/interesting thing he learned is different than what he had learned. I think the main point here is that he made a decision to write about that and not the 200 year old history. Who's to say he couldn't answer the same questions as any other student. The only thing shown about ASD is that they do not make the same decisions socially, not that they don't have the ability to do so.

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