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posted by martyb on Tuesday August 18 2015, @06:12PM   Printer-friendly
from the whoda-thunk? dept.

ScienceDaily summarizes a new study (paywalled) published a few days ago in the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders.

It is the first study to find a link between autistic traits and the creative thinking processes.

People with high levels of autistic traits are more likely to produce unusually creative ideas, new research confirms. While they found that people with high autistic traits produced fewer responses when generating alternative solutions to a problem - known as 'divergent thinking' - the responses they did produce were more original and creative.

The research...looked at people who may not have a diagnosis of autism but who have high levels of behaviours and thought processes typically associated with the condition. This builds on previous research suggesting there may be advantages to having some traits associated with autism without necessarily meeting criteria for diagnosis.

People with high autistic traits...are typically considered to be more rigid in their thinking, so the fact that the ideas they have are more unusual or rare is surprising. This difference may have positive implications for creative problem solving.

They might not run through things in the same way as someone without these traits would to get the typical ideas, but go directly to less common ones. In other words, the associative or memory-based route to being able to think of different ideas is impaired, whereas the specific ability to produce unusual responses is relatively unimpaired or superior.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 19 2015, @12:31AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 19 2015, @12:31AM (#224702)

    OP here. I've thought some more about this.

    They systematically put into words how someone they don't like turned out the way he did. Putting ideas into the listeners' minds that a person's unique situation and chemicals to which they were exposed made them do things a certain way, and that you, the listener, are not somebody like him and can think better and understand how their hated person became what he did. Now start hating him and slicing and dicing his ideas and words. Don't listen to him. Listen to us, we are your new best friends. We have your best interests in mind.

    This is all propaganda.

    Putting the blame on experiences and chemicals is a safe way to take away personal responsibility and creativity: The chemicals made him do it.

    How did Wagner create his Operas? The chemicals made him do it.

    I believe this belittles creativity and hard work. Creative people have been laughed at, and now are being systematically diagnosed by "scientists" as "unwell".

    Do not listen to this propaganda.