Jones Desiree R, Morrison Kerrianne E, DeBrabander Kilee M, Ackerman Robert A, Pinkham Amy E, Sasson Noah J
Department of Psychology, School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, The University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, TX, United States.
Front Psychol. 2021 Sep 22;12:739147. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.739147. eCollection 2021.
Bi-directional differences in social communication and behavior can contribute to poor interactions between autistic and non-autistic (NA) people, which in turn may reduce social opportunities for autistic adults and contribute to poor outcomes. Historically, interventions to improve social interaction in autism have focused on altering the behaviors of autistic people and have ignored the role of NA people. Recent efforts to improve autism understanding among NA adults via training have resulted in more favorable views toward autistic people, yet it remains unknown whether these benefits extend to real-world interactions between autistic and NA people. The current study explores whether a brief autism acceptance training (AAT) program can improve social interactions between autistic and NA adults. Thirty-nine NA males were randomly assigned to complete AAT or a no-training control condition, then participated in a 5-min unstructured conversation with an unfamiliar autistic male ( = 39). Following the conversation, participants rated their perceptions of interaction quality, first impressions of their partner, and their interest in future interactions with their partner. In dyads where the NA individual completed AAT, both the autistic and NA person endorsed greater future interest in hanging out with their partner relative to dyads in which the NA adult did not complete AAT. However, other social interaction outcomes, including ratings of interaction quality and first impressions of autistic partners, largely did not differ between training and no-training conditions, and assessments of the interaction were largely unrelated for autistic and NA partners within dyads. Results also indicated that NA participants, but not autistic participants, demonstrated substantial correspondence between evaluations of their partner and the interaction, suggesting that autistic adults may place less weight on trait judgments when assessing the quality of an interaction. These findings suggest that the brief AAT for NA adults used in this study may increase mutual social interest in real-world interactions between NA and autistic adults, but more systematic changes are likely needed to bridge divides between these individuals. Future work with larger, more diverse samples is recommended to further explore whether interventions targeting NA adults are beneficial for improving autistic experiences within NA social environments.
社交沟通与行为的双向差异会导致自闭症患者与非自闭症患者之间的互动不佳,进而可能减少自闭症成年人的社交机会并导致不良后果。从历史上看,改善自闭症社交互动的干预措施主要集中在改变自闭症患者的行为上,而忽略了非自闭症患者的作用。最近通过培训提高非自闭症成年人对自闭症理解的努力,使他们对自闭症患者产生了更积极的看法,但这些益处是否能延伸到自闭症患者与非自闭症患者之间的现实互动中仍不清楚。当前的研究探讨了一个简短的自闭症接纳培训(AAT)项目是否能改善自闭症成年人与非自闭症成年人之间的社交互动。39名非自闭症男性被随机分配完成AAT或无培训对照条件,然后与一名不熟悉的自闭症男性进行5分钟的无结构化对话(n = 39)。对话结束后,参与者对他们对互动质量的看法、对伴侣的第一印象以及他们对未来与伴侣互动的兴趣进行评分。在非自闭症个体完成AAT的二元组中,与非自闭症成年人未完成AAT的二元组相比,自闭症患者和非自闭症患者都表示对未来与伴侣一起出去玩更感兴趣。然而,其他社交互动结果,包括互动质量评分和对自闭症伴侣的第一印象,在培训组和无培训组之间大多没有差异,并且二元组中自闭症和非自闭症伴侣对互动的评估在很大程度上没有关联。结果还表明,非自闭症参与者而非自闭症参与者,在对伴侣的评价和互动之间表现出显著的一致性,这表明自闭症成年人在评估互动质量时可能较少重视特质判断。这些发现表明,本研究中用于非自闭症成年人的简短AAT可能会增加非自闭症和自闭症成年人在现实互动中的相互社交兴趣,但可能需要更系统的改变来弥合这些个体之间的差距。建议未来使用更大、更多样化的样本进行研究,以进一步探讨针对非自闭症成年人的干预措施是否有利于改善非自闭症社会环境中的自闭症体验。