361 results on '"Camouflaging"'
Search Results
2. A systematic review and meta-analysis of mental health outcomes associated with camouflaging in autistic people
- Author
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Khudiakova, Valeria, Russell, Emmeline, Sowden-Carvalho, Sophie, and Surtees, Andrew D.R.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Autistic trans camouflaging: an early phenomenological exploration.
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Hake, Ruby
- Subjects
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AUTISTIC people , *TRANSGENDER people , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *NEURODIVERSITY , *AUTISM - Abstract
Autistic people often camouflage, i.e. they adopt certain behaviors in order to fit in in neurotypical environments. Autobiographical accounts suggest that autistic trans people experience camouflaging in a unique, more complex and often heightened way than cis autistic people, and this has not been studied. They have autistic traits to mask, as well as gendered traits, in a hostile neuronormative and cisnormative world. This intersection of experience is worthy of exploration, not least because this group of people are typically misunderstood and silenced, as well as being particularly at risk of the mental distress that can come from camouflaging. In this paper I discuss autistic trans people's accounts of camouflaging and begin a preliminary phenomenological analysis. I draw primarily from Simone de Beauvoir's concept of "doubling", whereby (cis) women experience being both oneself and the image of oneself, under patriarchal objectification. One can argue that autistic people are similarly "doubled" when camouflaging, experiencing their neurodivergent selves as well as their more neurotypical presentation. Going beyond de Beauvoir, it can be further argued that many trans people experience "tripling" and therefore that trans autistic people experience being at least "quadrupled" if not "quintupled". [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The associations between self-rated autistic traits, social camouflaging, and mental health outcomes in Taiwanese anime, comics and games (ACG) doujin creators: an exploratory study
- Author
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Yen-Chun Kuo, Hsing-Chang Ni, and Chun-Hao Liu
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Anime, comics and games (ACG) ,Doujin ,Autistic traits ,Camouflaging ,Mental health ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Abstract Background Doujin (どうじん) is a Japanese term referring to a circle where people share the same interests, usually something that belongs to the Anime, Comics, and Games (ACG) subculture. Individuals who belong to it and create related works, known as ACG doujin creators, are usually described as socially awkward and at potential risk of isolation. In such a context, they may theoretically exhibit higher autistic traits and manifest camouflaging tendencies, which may consequently be associated with their mental health. Nonetheless, the impact of autistic traits and camouflaging on mental health in this subculture remains significantly underexplored. Methods We recruited 183 Taiwanese ACG doujin creators (age ranges from 18 to 41, 146 female and 37 male) via social networking platforms. Participants completed Chinese online surveys assessing socio-demographic information, doujin activities, past psychiatric history, the 35-item Version of Autism-Spectrum Quotient (AQ-35), Chinese version Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire (CAT-Q-Ch), the General Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7), and the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9). Linear regression analysis was employed to examine the associations between the aforementioned scales. Results Our findings revealed that among ACG doujin creators, descriptively higher level of AQ-35 and CAT-Q-Ch than previous studies were found. Moreover, we observed a positive association between camouflaging behaviours and most AQ-35 subscales, with the exception of the mindreading subscale. Additionally, we identified that both camouflaging and autistic traits were significantly linked to higher PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores. Conclusions Through this study, we gained insight into the distinctive characteristics of autistic traits, camouflaging behaviours, and mental health among Taiwanese ACG doujin creators, as the associations between the factors mentioned above are divergent compared to previous research. This topic demonstrated that camouflaging is also associated with adverse mental health in a subculture group.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. 'Struggling to appear normal': a moderated mediational analysis of empathy and camouflaging in the association between autistic traits and depressive symptoms.
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Lu, Minghui, Pang, Feifan, Peng, Tianyu, Liu, Yong, and Wang, Rong
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EMPATHY ,RISK assessment ,SELF-evaluation ,STATISTICAL correlation ,PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation ,RESEARCH funding ,AUTISM ,RESEARCH ,ASPERGER'S syndrome ,PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,FACTOR analysis ,MENTAL depression ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background: Camouflaging or camouflaging autistic traits—strategies that hide social impairments to match societal norms—has been linked to empathy and depressive symptoms in autism research. Much epidemiological evidence has further revealed that characteristics of autism and autistic traits are distributed continuously throughout the general population. Nonetheless, the relationship between these variables in the Chinese general population is unclear. Method: The present study aimed to elucidate the relationships between autistic traits, empathy, camouflaging, and depressive symptoms in a subclinical sample of 1215 Chinese university students of ages 18–27, using self-report assessments. Results: Correlational analysis revealed that autistic traits, camouflaging, and depressive symptoms were significantly intercorrelated. Empathy was significantly correlated with autistic traits and camouflaging. Mediation analysis revealed that camouflaging mediated the positive link between autistic traits and depressive symptoms. Moderated mediation analysis further indicated that the first stage mediated path (autistic traits → camouflaging) was weaker for students with lower levels of empathy. Conclusions: The results suggest that camouflaging is a key contributor in the positive association between autistic traits and depressive symptoms, and that empathy help stimulate the development and maintenance of camouflaging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Camouflaging in neurodivergent and neurotypical girls at the transition to adolescence and its relationship to mental health: A participatory methods research study.
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McKinney, Ailbhe, O'Brien, Sarah, Maybin, Jacqueline A., Chan, Stella W. Y., Richer, Simone, and Rhodes, Sinead
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MENTAL illness , *APRAXIA , *HEALTH equity , *NEURODIVERSITY ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
Background: Adolescent girls with diagnoses of autism, ADHD and/or developmental coordination disorder (DCD) are at higher risk for mental health problems than boys with the same diagnoses and neurotypical girls. These girls are called neurodivergent here, though neurodivergence includes a broader range of diagnoses. One possible reason for this mental health disparity could be camouflaging, a coping strategy used more by girls. Camouflaging is when the individual pretends to be neurotypical, often involving substantial effort. This study aims to understand: (a) if the use of camouflaging has started by early adolescence, (b) how components of camouflaging (assimilation, masking, and compensation) present at this age, (c) if age predicts camouflaging and (d) what is the relationship with mental health. Methods: Participatory methods: A co‐production team of 15 adult neurodivergent women co‐produced the project and ranked camouflaging as their most important research theme. Main Study: Participants were 119 girls (70 neurodivergent, 49 neurotypical) aged 11–14 years. A transdiagnostic approach was adopted and the neurodivergent group had a diagnosis of autism, ADHD and/or DCD. Girls completed self‐report measures of camouflaging, anxiety, and depression in an online meeting with a researcher. Results: Neurodivergent and neurotypical girls presented similarly on two components of camouflaging namely masking and compensation, components related to presenting in a socially acceptable way and mimicry. Groups differed on the assimilation component, which is related to trying to fit in and involves the feelings of pretending/acting. Age had a medium effect on camouflaging with higher levels of camouflaging observed in older girls. Camouflaging scores strongly predicted anxiety and depression scores in both groups. Conclusions: The use of camouflaging, specifically assimilation, is evident in a transdiagnostic sample of 11–14 year old neurodivergent girls. Importantly, the strong relationship between camouflaging and poor mental health is present at this early age, substantiating the co‐production team's insights. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Camouflaging, not sensory processing or autistic identity, predicts eating disorder symptoms in autistic adults.
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Bradley, Siofra, Moore, Fhionna, Duffy, Fiona, Clark, Lili, Suratwala, Tasha, Knightsmith, Pooky, and Gillespie-Smith, Karri
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RISK assessment , *GROUP identity , *RESEARCH funding , *AUTISM , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *SYMPTOM burden , *QUANTITATIVE research , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *EATING disorders , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *SOCIAL skills , *ASPERGER'S syndrome , *DISEASE complications , *ADULTS - Abstract
The objective of this study was to explore the role that Autistic identity, sensory processing and camouflaging behaviours have on eating disorder symptomology in Autistic adults. Previous research has focused on cognitive and sensory factors to explain the association between autism and eating disorders, but the roles of social identity and camouflaging are yet to be explored. Autistic participants (N = 180) were recruited from NHS settings and community groups. The participants completed online questionnaires measuring autistic identity, camouflaging behaviours, sensory processing, autistic traits and eating disorder symptoms. Multiple regression revealed that camouflaging significantly predicted eating disorder symptoms. Although sensory processing was related, it did not significantly predict eating disorder symptom severity. In addition, there was no significant relationship between autistic identity and eating disorder symptom severity. This study highlights the impact that camouflaging behaviours and sensory processing can have on eating disorder symptomatology in autism and may indicate important considerations for the treatment of eating disorders in Autistic people. This study aimed to explore the impact of Autistic identity (i.e. feeling like you belong to the Autistic community), sensory profiles (e.g. being over or under responsive to sensations) and camouflaging behaviours (i.e. masking) on eating disorder symptoms in Autistic adults. 180 Autistic people were recruited from the community and NHS. The Autistic people completed online questionnaires measuring Autistic identity, sensory profiles, camouflaging behaviours, autistic traits and eating disorder symptoms. The analysis showed that higher levels of camouflaging behaviour predicted higher levels of eating disorder symptoms. Sensory profiles were related to but did not predict eating disorder symptoms and there was no relationship between level of Autistic identity and eating disorder symptoms. This shows that camouflaging is the most important predictor of eating disorder symptoms in Autistic people, and warrants further exploration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Camouflaging, internalized stigma, and mental health in the general population.
- Author
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Ai, Wei, Cunningham, William A., and Lai, Meng-Chuan
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COMPETENCY assessment (Law) , *RESEARCH funding , *ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder , *AUTISM , *NEURODIVERSITY , *SEX distribution , *MENTAL illness , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *SOCIAL groups , *SOCIAL skills , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *ASPERGER'S syndrome , *FACTOR analysis , *SOCIAL stigma , *SOCIAL anxiety - Abstract
Background: Camouflaging, the strategies that some autistic people use to hide their differences, has been hypothesized to trigger mental health ramifications. Camouflaging might reflect ubiquitous impression management experiences that are not unique to autistic people and similarly impact the mental health of non-autistic people. Aims: We first examined whether individuals in the general population camouflage and manage impressions while experiencing mental health repercussions, and how gender and neurodivergent traits modified these associations. We then assessed how camouflaging and impression management arose from internalized stigma, and their inter-relationships in shaping mental health outcomes. Methods: Data were collected from 972 adults from a representative U.S. general population sample, with measures pertaining to camouflaging, impression management, mental health, internalized stigma, and neurodivergent traits. Multivariate hierarchical regression and moderated mediation analyses were used to address the two research aims. Results: Both camouflaging and self-presentation (a key component of impression management) were associated with mental health presentations in the general population, which overlapped with those previously reported in autistic people. These associations were more pronounced in women compared with men and were of different directions for individuals with higher autistic traits versus higher ADHD traits. Internalized stigma might be a key stressor that could elicit camouflaging and impression management through social anxiety, which in turn might lead to adverse mental health outcomes. Conclusions: These findings advance the conceptual clarity and clinical relevance of camouflaging and impression management across social and neurodiverse groups in the general population. The ramifications of camouflaging and impression management underscore the need to alleviate internalized stigma for better mental health across human groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. The repressed life of adult female patients with mild ADHD.
- Author
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Shigenobu Toda, Sakiko Tsushima, Osamu Takashio, Mitsuru Kikuchi, Haruhisa Ohta, Tatsuya Nagasawa, Akira Iwanami, and Yutaka Ohashi
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CHILDREN with autism spectrum disorders ,ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder ,CHILDREN with learning disabilities ,GENERALIZED anxiety disorder ,EATING disorders in adolescence ,HYPERSOMNIA ,NECK pain - Abstract
The article "The repressed life of adult female patients with mild ADHD" published in Frontiers in Psychiatry discusses the overlooked characteristics of adult females with mild ADHD, focusing on their daily struggles and psychopathological phenotypes. It highlights the challenges faced by these individuals in the workplace, their tendency to camouflage their symptoms, and the prevalence of comorbidities such as anxiety disorders. The article also addresses the cultural differences in symptom manifestation and the impact of ADHD on social activities. The authors emphasize the need for a better understanding of these individuals to prevent underdiagnosis or misdiagnosis. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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10. The associations between self-rated autistic traits, social camouflaging, and mental health outcomes in Taiwanese anime, comics and games (ACG) doujin creators: an exploratory study.
- Author
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Kuo, Yen-Chun, Ni, Hsing-Chang, and Liu, Chun-Hao
- Subjects
SOCIAL networks ,COMEDIANS ,REGRESSION analysis ,LINEAR statistical models ,ANIME - Abstract
Background: Doujin (どうじん) is a Japanese term referring to a circle where people share the same interests, usually something that belongs to the Anime, Comics, and Games (ACG) subculture. Individuals who belong to it and create related works, known as ACG doujin creators, are usually described as socially awkward and at potential risk of isolation. In such a context, they may theoretically exhibit higher autistic traits and manifest camouflaging tendencies, which may consequently be associated with their mental health. Nonetheless, the impact of autistic traits and camouflaging on mental health in this subculture remains significantly underexplored. Methods: We recruited 183 Taiwanese ACG doujin creators (age ranges from 18 to 41, 146 female and 37 male) via social networking platforms. Participants completed Chinese online surveys assessing socio-demographic information, doujin activities, past psychiatric history, the 35-item Version of Autism-Spectrum Quotient (AQ-35), Chinese version Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire (CAT-Q-Ch), the General Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7), and the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9). Linear regression analysis was employed to examine the associations between the aforementioned scales. Results: Our findings revealed that among ACG doujin creators, descriptively higher level of AQ-35 and CAT-Q-Ch than previous studies were found. Moreover, we observed a positive association between camouflaging behaviours and most AQ-35 subscales, with the exception of the mindreading subscale. Additionally, we identified that both camouflaging and autistic traits were significantly linked to higher PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores. Conclusions: Through this study, we gained insight into the distinctive characteristics of autistic traits, camouflaging behaviours, and mental health among Taiwanese ACG doujin creators, as the associations between the factors mentioned above are divergent compared to previous research. This topic demonstrated that camouflaging is also associated with adverse mental health in a subculture group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Educating for Authenticity? A Discussion of Impression Management in the context of Cross-Neurotype and Cross-Cultural Communication with Possible Implications for Education.
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NICA, Daniel and HOJBOTĂ, Ana-Maria
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CULTURAL pluralism , *AUTISM spectrum disorders , *CROSS-cultural communication , *PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout , *DEPERSONALIZATION , *IMPRESSION management - Abstract
One of the most significant challenges that neurodivergent individuals face is the struggle to maintain a sense of authenticity when confronted with strong pressures to conform to the behaviors and norms expected by the majority. This issue arises in everyday settings, with notable implications healthcare and professional contexts and especially in educational settings. In this paper, we will explore whether a radical shift in the current educational system is necessary to safeguard the authenticity of vulnerable individuals, considering authenticity as a right rather than a privilege. First, we will examine how educational practices often sacrifice the authenticity of autistic students, encouraging them to conform to neurotypical behaviors through masking and impression management techniques. Such approaches can have significant consequences, including heightened stress, emotional exhaustion and suicidality. Similarly, foreign-born students face pressures to assimilate, which can lead to the suppression of their cultural identities and a loss of self. Drawing parallels between the experiences of autistic individuals and immigrants, the paper explores how both groups navigate social spaces that demand conformity to either cultural or neurotypical norms, often at the expense of their authentic selves. In the second part of the paper, we will take into consideration the opportunity and the ethical urgency of possible solutions for preserving the authenticity of minority groups as those we analyze (although parallels and implications can be extended to other marginalized identities), such as incorporating neurodiversity and cultural diversity into the curriculum, adopting more flexible assessment methods, and providing training for educators on recognizing and supporting authentic self-expression. The paper also presents arguments favoring reforming educational settings to preserve authenticity, emphasizing the potential benefits for well-being and equity. However, it balances this perspective by considering the challenges of such reforms, including pushback from administrators, acknowledging the need to prepare students to navigate broader social norms as long as the social spaces are dominated by neuronormativity, and the practical difficulties of implementing systemic changes. Ultimately, the paper highlights the complexity of the issue and calls for a nuanced approach to fostering authenticity in education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Double-Edged Effects of Social Strategies on the Well-Being of Autistic People: Impact of Self-Perceived Effort and Efficacy.
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Funawatari, Ren, Sumiya, Motofumi, Iwabuchi, Toshiki, and Senju, Atsushi
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AUTISTIC people , *WELL-being , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *RESEARCH personnel , *SOCIAL interaction - Abstract
Background/Objectives: Autistic people employ various social strategies to form and maintain interpersonal relationships in their daily environments. These strategies can help autistic people with social interactions (leading to self-perceived efficacy of using social strategies), but can also lead to cognitive fatigue (self-perceived effort of using social strategies). However, previous studies have focused primarily on self-perceived effort, overlooking the self-perceived efficacy of using social strategies, and the balance between self-perceived effort and efficacy. To address this gap, this study examined the impact of autistic people's use of social strategies on their well-being, focusing on self-perceived effort, self-perceived efficacy, and their interaction effect. Methods: An online survey was conducted among self-reported autistic people in Japan aged 18–65 years, using a modified Compensation Checklist. Data from 104 self-reported autistic participants were analyzed using linear regression. Results: High self-perceived effort in using social strategies was negatively associated with well-being, whereas high self-perceived efficacy was positively associated with well-being. The interaction effect between effort and efficacy was not significant. These results were supported even when loneliness was used as an index of social well-being. Additionally, the number of strategies used by an autistic person was positively associated with well-being. Conclusions: This study highlights the double-edged effect of autistic people using social strategies, and that using a broader repertoire of social strategies may improve the well-being of autistic people. These findings call for a nuanced approach by researchers and clinicians considering both the positive and negative aspects of using social strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. A “Round, Bruising Sort of Pain”: Autistic Girls’ Social Camouflaging in Inclusive High School Settings
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Goscicki, Brittney L., Scoggins, Mattie E., Espinosa, Gabriela Herrera, and Hodapp, Robert M.
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- 2025
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14. “Do My Friends Only Like the School Me or the True Me?”: School Belonging, Camouflaging, and Anxiety in Autistic Students
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Atkinson, Elizabeth, Wright, Sarah, and Wood-Downie, Henry
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- 2025
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15. Mindreading in context
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Otterski, Emma Rose, Isaac, Alistair, and Lavelle, Suilin
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Mindreading ,Camouflaging ,autism ,mindshaping - Abstract
This thesis concerns mindreading, the ability to attribute mental states to others. The standard conception of mindreading emerged from philosophical debates about our everyday use of mental-state terms and experiments in psychology. Underlying this conception, I suggest, are three assumptions: that mindreading is fundamental to our social understanding, that it is (solely) aimed at accuracy, and that its purpose is to explain and predict others' behaviour. While the core chapters of this thesis were conceived of separately, they each challenge one or more of these assumptions, putting pressure on the standard conception and presenting new directions for mindreading research. The first chapter provides historical and theoretical background to mindreading research. This helps to contextualise the standard conception of mindreading and the three main assumptions that underly it. I then provide summaries of the remaining chapters and detail how they address these assumptions. Chapter 2 looks at what I call the 'third-person' objection to the standard conception of mindreading. This objection is frequently alluded to in the literature; opponents of the standard conception of mindreading tend to assume that it is self-explanatory, while proponents often dismiss it by emphasising the importance or frequency of mindreading. After considering these approaches, this chapter offers a framework for thinking about the third-person objection, disambiguating three distinct targets: the perspective involved in mindreading, the purpose of mindreading, and the access that mindreading grants to others. To evaluate these criticisms, I suggest we need to consider how interactions' perceptual and cognitive demands can differ, specifically with regard to the reciprocity and goals involved. These aspects of interactions are not typically recognised; once we do so we can take a broader view of the purposes of, and perspective taken, in social cognition than either proponents or opponents of the standard conception typically allow. Chapter 3 asks whether we perceive others' emotions directly rather than infer them as in mindreading accounts. I outline different interpretations of what is at stake in the inferential/non-inferential distinction and examine an approach based on the similarity of emotion recognition to object recognition. I argue that this fails to appreciate key differences between emotion recognition and object recognition, namely the flexibility of, and effect of context on, facial expression perception and emotion categorisation. This allows me to distinguish between affect perception and emotion perception, and from here, I argue that we perceive the valence of people's affective expressions. Socio-cultural effects on mindreading are considered in chapter 4. I present evidence that shows intra-cultural differences in how we mindread based on socio-economic status in society - those with low socioeconomic status are more likely to attend to context when attributing mental states to others. I then suggest that transitory status in an interaction may also affect our motivation to mindread. These arguments highlight the impact of culture and social dynamics on mindreading, an area that has received relatively little attention and cannot be easily accommodated by traditional theories of mindreading. In chapter five, I broaden the lens to offer a philosophical analysis of camouflaging in autism. Camouflaging - the use of coping strategies in social situations and the repression of specific behaviours - is increasingly given as a reason for the under- and late diagnosis of autism in women and girls. The social difficulties in autism are often attributed to mindreading difficulties, but camouflaging might show that these can be compensated. To try to understand this, first, I suggest that the concept of camouflaging is ambiguous regarding several different phenomena: socialisation differences, bias in tests, and implicit and explicit compensation. Then, drawing on the mindshaping literature, I argue that social categorisation has pervasive effects on behaviour and how one is understood. This helps to explain ambiguities with the concept of camouflaging while demonstrating the importance of researching it. Finally, in chapter 6, the conclusion, I rehearse the critical insights of this thesis, and consider relevant future research.
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- 2023
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16. Exploring the mediating effect of camouflaging and the moderating effect of autistic identity on the relationship between autistic traits and mental wellbeing.
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Moore, Heather L., Cassidy, Sarah, and Rodgers, Jacqui
- Abstract
Mental health difficulties are prevalent among autistic adults. Camouflaging (behaving differently to fit in) may be a mechanism by which autistic traits and mental health difficulties relate to each other, but little research has considered the role of different facets of camouflaging. Additionally, autistic identity might buffer against camouflaging and mental health difficulties. This research aims to explore the mediating effects of camouflaging behaviours on the relationship between autistic traits and both positive and negative mental wellbeing, as well as how autistic identity might moderate the relationship between autistic traits and camouflaging, and also mental health. Data were available for 627 autistic adults, recruited through volunteer databases and social media. Participants completed measures of autistic traits, anxiety, depression, positive wellbeing, camouflaging behaviours (compensating for difficulties, masking, and assimilating/putting on an act) and autistic identity. Mediation and moderated mediation models were tested, applying 95% bootstrapped CIs (10,000 resamples) and including age, gender and diagnosis as covariates. There were no significant direct effects between autistic traits and mental wellbeing. Assimilation was a significant mediator of all mental wellbeing measures, and compensation was a significant mediator of positive wellbeing only. Autistic identity was not a significant moderator. Assimilation and compensation should be considered when offering psychological interventions to support mental wellbeing of autistic people. Additional research into external drivers of camouflaging (e.g. stigma) and mechanisms by which camouflaging impacts mental wellbeing, such as autonomy, authenticity, skill mastery and community, may identify other areas of support. Concurrently, societal change is necessary to reduce the need to camouflage. Lay Summary: Putting on an act to fit in is linked to worse depression, anxiety, suicidality, and positive wellbeing. Compensating for difficulties is linked to better positive wellbeing. A positive autistic identity did not change this. We should explore why changing how you act and compensating have this effect, so we can give better support and improve wellbeing for autistic people. We should also reduce stigma from society, so autistic people do not need to change their behaviour to try to fit in. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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17. Exploring the presence of a sex-specific phenotype of autism spectrum disorder in a random cohort of males and females: a retrospective case note service audit
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Day, Rebecca, Simmons, Luke, Shade, Elizabeth, Jennison, Jo, Allely, Clare S., and Mukherjee, Raja A.S.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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18. Validation of the camouflaging autistic traits questionnaire short form (CATQ-SF)
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Laura Hull, Will Mandy, Hannah Belcher, and K.V. Petrides
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Autism ,Camouflaging ,Masking ,Measure development ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Background: Camouflaging of autistic traits involves hiding or compensating for autistic characteristics, often due to stigma or a desire to fit in with others. This behaviour has been associated with mental health issues in autistic individuals. The 2 5-item Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire (CAT-Q) is the most commonly used self-report measure of camouflaging. In this study, a 9-item short form version was developed for use in clinical and research settings. Aims: To construct and psychometrically validate a brief self-report measure of camouflaging. Method: The Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire – Short Form (CATQ-SF) was developed and its factor structure and psychometric properties were evaluated in two studies. Study 1 used a large, online sample of autistic and non-autistic adults (N = 832) to evaluate the factor structure, psychometric properties, and measurement invariance of the CATQ-SF. Study 2 used an independent sample of autistic and non-autistic adults (N = 80) to test Study 1's findings. Results: In Study 1, evidence for a three-factor structure was observed, with good internal consistency (combined autistic & non-autistic α = 0.84). In addition, the instrument demonstrated measurement invariance, and reliably predicted higher levels of autistic traits. In Study 2, the 3-factor structure was replicated, and good internal consistency was again observed (combined autistic and non-autistic α = 0.89). In both studies, psychometric properties were of similar or higher validity compared to the full-form CAT-Q. Conclusions: The CATQ-SF can be used by clinicians and researchers to measure camouflaging in autistic and non-autistic adults quickly and reliably.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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19. Differently different?: A commentary on the emerging social cognitive neuroscience of female autism
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Gina Rippon
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Autism ,Sex/gender ,Social brain ,fMRI ,Male bias ,Camouflaging ,Medicine ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Abstract
Abstract Autism is a neurodevelopmental condition, behaviourally identified, which is generally characterised by social communication differences, and restrictive and repetitive patterns of behaviour and interests. It has long been claimed that it is more common in males. This observed preponderance of males in autistic populations has served as a focussing framework in all spheres of autism-related issues, from recognition and diagnosis through to theoretical models and research agendas. One related issue is the near total absence of females in key research areas. For example, this paper reports a review of over 120 brain-imaging studies of social brain processes in autism that reveals that nearly 70% only included male participants or minimal numbers (just one or two) of females. Authors of such studies very rarely report that their cohorts are virtually female-free and discuss their findings as though applicable to all autistic individuals. The absence of females can be linked to exclusionary consequences of autism diagnostic procedures, which have mainly been developed on male-only cohorts. There is clear evidence that disproportionately large numbers of females do not meet diagnostic criteria and are then excluded from ongoing autism research. Another issue is a long-standing assumption that the female autism phenotype is broadly equivalent to that of the male autism phenotype. Thus, models derived from male-based studies could be applicable to females. However, it is now emerging that certain patterns of social behaviour may be very different in females. This includes a specific type of social behaviour called camouflaging or masking, linked to attempts to disguise autistic characteristics. With respect to research in the field of sex/gender cognitive neuroscience, there is emerging evidence of female differences in patterns of connectivity and/or activation in the social brain that are at odds with those reported in previous, male-only studies. Decades of research have excluded or overlooked females on the autistic spectrum, resulting in the construction of inaccurate and misleading cognitive neuroscience models, and missed opportunities to explore the brain bases of this highly complex condition. A note of warning needs to be sounded about inferences drawn from past research, but if future research addresses this problem of male bias, then a deeper understanding of autism as a whole, as well as in previously overlooked females, will start to emerge.
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- 2024
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20. Exploring the Lived Experiences of Autistic Women: A Thematic Synthesis
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Gosling, Jonah, Purrington, Jack, and Hartley, Gemma
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- 2024
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21. Does Camouflaging Cause Reduced Quality of Life? A Co-Twin Control Study
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Remnélius, Karl Lundin, Neufeld, Janina, Isaksson, Johan, and Bölte, Sven
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- 2024
- Full Text
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22. Differently different?: A commentary on the emerging social cognitive neuroscience of female autism.
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Rippon, Gina
- Subjects
AUTISM ,COGNITIVE neuroscience ,NEUROSCIENCES ,SEX (Biology) ,SOCIAL commentary ,BRAIN research ,FEMALES ,GENDER differences (Psychology) - Abstract
Autism is a neurodevelopmental condition, behaviourally identified, which is generally characterised by social communication differences, and restrictive and repetitive patterns of behaviour and interests. It has long been claimed that it is more common in males. This observed preponderance of males in autistic populations has served as a focussing framework in all spheres of autism-related issues, from recognition and diagnosis through to theoretical models and research agendas. One related issue is the near total absence of females in key research areas. For example, this paper reports a review of over 120 brain-imaging studies of social brain processes in autism that reveals that nearly 70% only included male participants or minimal numbers (just one or two) of females. Authors of such studies very rarely report that their cohorts are virtually female-free and discuss their findings as though applicable to all autistic individuals. The absence of females can be linked to exclusionary consequences of autism diagnostic procedures, which have mainly been developed on male-only cohorts. There is clear evidence that disproportionately large numbers of females do not meet diagnostic criteria and are then excluded from ongoing autism research. Another issue is a long-standing assumption that the female autism phenotype is broadly equivalent to that of the male autism phenotype. Thus, models derived from male-based studies could be applicable to females. However, it is now emerging that certain patterns of social behaviour may be very different in females. This includes a specific type of social behaviour called camouflaging or masking, linked to attempts to disguise autistic characteristics. With respect to research in the field of sex/gender cognitive neuroscience, there is emerging evidence of female differences in patterns of connectivity and/or activation in the social brain that are at odds with those reported in previous, male-only studies. Decades of research have excluded or overlooked females on the autistic spectrum, resulting in the construction of inaccurate and misleading cognitive neuroscience models, and missed opportunities to explore the brain bases of this highly complex condition. A note of warning needs to be sounded about inferences drawn from past research, but if future research addresses this problem of male bias, then a deeper understanding of autism as a whole, as well as in previously overlooked females, will start to emerge. Plain Language Summary: Autism is a neurodevelopmental condition, behaviourally identified, which is generally characterised by social communication differences, and restrictive and repetitive patterns of behaviour and interests. It has long been claimed that it is more common in males, with oft-quoted ratios of 4M: 1F. This has been reflected in the development of diagnostic criteria for autism and, consequently, of measures of eligibility for autism research programmes, with females being (as is now emerging) disproportionately excluded. As outlined in this review, this issue has been particularly problematic in brain-based studies of autism. Many studies have only tested male autistic participants, or minimal numbers of autistic females. By default, sex differences were not examined. But the impression given by such research reports has commonly been that the findings would be applicable to all autistic individuals. Recent psychological and clinical research has shown that there are a significant number of autistic females who have been missed by traditional diagnostic practices. Their inclusion has increased their eligibility for autism research studies. With respect to brain research, it has become possible to devise studies with matched numbers of autistic females and males, and to replicate studies that have previously only tested males. Newly emerging findings from such studies are demonstrating that the 'robust' autism-related differences previously observed in autistic male-only cohorts do not fully generalise to autistic females. It will be necessary to exercise caution in drawing inferences from previous male-biased studies of the autistic brain. However, the identification and inclusion of previously excluded female autistic participants hopefully offers more accurate insights into this highly complex and heterogeneous condition. Highlights: Several decades of neuroimaging research into autism has been based almost entirely on males; even big data sets show strong evidence of male bias. There is clear evidence that autistic females are being excluded from the research process by failures in diagnostic practices that have been developed on male-biased cohorts. Models of autism which inform research protocols are based on male autism phenotypes; it appears to have been assumed that the substantially fewer females that are diagnosed will present with equivalent, if milder, patterns of autistic differences. Newly emerging findings from social cognitive neuroscience research studies investigating sex/gender differences in autistic behaviour and associated biological correlates are demonstrating that the 'robust' autism-related differences previously observed in autistic male-only cohorts do not fully generalise to autistic females. Autism research programmes should prioritise the exploration of sex/gender effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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23. Drowning, Not Waving: Autism in Women and Girls.
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Evanko, Rebecca
- Subjects
AUTISM ,MEASURING instruments ,PHENOTYPES ,INFORMATION sharing ,MEDICAL personnel - Abstract
Recent research strongly indicates emerging evidence for an autistic female phenotype that differs from presentations of autism in males. The hallmarks of autism in women and girls are difficulties in social relationships, often accompanied by the phenomenon of camouflaging or masking. An estimated 80 percent of autistic females remain undiagnosed by the age of 18, resulting in the potential for enormous mental health challenges for a significant number of women. Key concepts in identifying autism in women and girls is an ability to articulate the characteristics of the autistic female phenotype, to define the phenomenon of masking and the instruments designed to measure it, and to identify the challenges with the current "gold-standards" of autism assessment. Sharing new knowledge in this newly-emerging field of female autism is critical to ensure clinicians are kept up-to-date in their assessment practices and professional counseling approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
24. Camouflaging in Autism: Age Effects and Cross-Cultural Validation of the Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire (CAT-Q).
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Lundin Remnélius, Karl and Bölte, Sven
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MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques , *AUTISM , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SEX distribution , *AGE distribution , *SOCIAL skills , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *RESEARCH methodology , *STATISTICAL reliability , *PERSONALITY , *MENTAL depression , *EVALUATION ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Given that camouflaging has been suggested to contribute to delayed diagnosis and mental health problems among autistic people, validated measures of the construct are needed. This study describes the psychometric evaluation of the Swedish adaptation of the self-reported Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire (CAT-Q) in autistic (n = 100) and general population (n = 539) samples aged 10 to 83 years. Analyses indicated good-to-excellent internal consistency and test-retest reliability. Construct validity was supported by autistic participants scoring higher than non-autistic, and autistic females scoring higher than autistic males on the measure. Also as expected, camouflaging was associated with theoretically linked traits, including autistic behaviors and depressive symptoms. On the other hand, the factor structure of the original CAT-Q did not provide a good fit in the Swedish data set, and validity issues were found, particularly in children younger than 15 years, warranting further investigation of the construct validity of the scale. Different age trajectories were observed, where camouflaging behaviors decreased during adulthood in non-autistic people but remained at an elevated level among autistic people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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25. The relationship between camouflaging and mental health: Are there differences among subgroups in autistic adults?
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van der Putten, Wikke J, Mol, Audrey JJ, Radhoe, Tulsi A, Torenvliet, Carolien, Agelink van Rentergem, Joost A, Groenman, Annabeth P, and Geurts, Hilde M
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- *
MASKING (Psychology) , *MENTAL health , *RESEARCH funding , *AUTISM , *QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
Camouflaging is hypothesized to play an important role in developing mental health difficulties. But this might not be true for everyone. It remains unclear for whom camouflaging is associated with mental health. In this preregistered study (AsPredicted #45095), we investigated whether (1) camouflaging and mental health were associated and (2) we could detect subgroups with a different association between camouflaging and mental health. For this study, 352 autistic adults aged 30–84 years filled in, among others, the Dutch Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire to measure camouflaging and the Symptom Checklist-90 Revised to measure mental health difficulties. We found a moderate correlation between camouflaging and mental health difficulties (r = 0.45). However, there was only a strong association between camouflaging and mental health in a small subgroup, while the association was small in most autistic adults. For varying levels of negative affect and (to a lesser extent) autism traits, the association between camouflaging and mental health differed, but not for biological sex, age, or educational level. Thus, while one should be careful with group-based conclusions regarding the (negative) impact of camouflaging, camouflaging can be important to consider in clinical practice, especially for people with a substantial level of negative affect. When autistic people use strategies to hide their autistic characteristics, we call this camouflaging. Autistic adults suggested that camouflaging can result in mental health difficulties. That is, people who report to camouflage also report mental health difficulties. However, since there are many differences between autistic people, this relationship may also differ between subgroups. Therefore, in this study we investigated whether camouflaging and mental health difficulties are related and whether this relationship is equal for all autistic adults. For this study, 352 autistic adults aged 30–84 years filled in the Dutch Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire to measure camouflaging and the Symptom Checklist-90 Revised to measure mental health difficulties. We found that camouflaging was moderately related to mental health difficulties. This means that people who report more camouflaging also report more mental health difficulties. When we looked closer, we found that this relationship was strong for only a small subgroup of autistic adults. In most other autistic adults, there was a small or no relationship between camouflaging and mental health difficulties. Therefore, it is important that clinicians are aware of camouflaging and its possible relationship with mental health difficulties, but that they do not generalize the negative consequences to everyone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. Dropping the mask: It takes two.
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Cook, Julia M, Crane, Laura, and Mandy, William
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QUALITATIVE research , *RESEARCH funding , *AUTISM , *SOCIAL perception , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ANXIETY , *EXPERIENCE , *THEMATIC analysis , *SOCIAL context , *SOCIAL skills , *COMMUNICATION , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *COMMUNICATION barriers - Abstract
In some social situations, autistic people feel pressure to modify their innate social behaviour (i.e. camouflage), while in other social situations they feel free to engage in ways that feel authentic or true to themselves. To date, the latter aspect of autistic people's experience has rarely been explored. Using an online qualitative survey, this study examined 133 autistic people's experiences and perspectives of socialising in ways that felt authentic to them, with a particular focus on mixed-neurotype interactions and the role of nonautistic people. Using reflexive thematic analysis, four themes were generated: (1) embracing diverse communication styles, interests and perspectives; (2) creating a more inclusive mixed-neurotype social environment together; (3) minimising and managing mixed-neurotype miscommunication in mutually beneficial ways; and (4) enjoyable interactions involving reduced anxiety and exhaustion as well as genuine connection and rapport. These findings are discussed with reference to theory and research involving the construct of authenticity both inside and outside the field of autism research. The knowledge generated in this study illuminates a previously underexplored aspect of autistic people's experience and elucidates potential avenues through which to enhance the social experiences and well-being of this group. In some situations, autistic people feel pressure to change their social behaviour by camouflaging. In other situations, autistic people feel they don't need to change their social behaviour. Instead, they feel they can socialise in ways that feel authentic or true to themselves. Past research has tended to focus on autistic people's experiences of camouflaging rather than their experiences of authenticity. In this study, we asked autistic people what it is like for them when they can socialise in ways that feel authentic or true to themselves. Autistic people described authentic-feeling socialising as more free, spontaneous and open than camouflaging. In supportive environments, this kind of socialising had more positive and less negative consequences than camouflaging. Autistic people felt that having self-awareness and acceptance of their own social needs and being around autistic and nonautistic people who were accepting and understanding helped them to socialise in authentic-feeling ways. Autistic people also spoke about communication behaviours they felt nonautistic people should use to help overcome misunderstandings and create autism-friendly social environments. These findings suggest it is helpful for autistic people to have access to supportive and accepting social environments in which they feel able to socialise in ways that feel authentic to them. In creating such social environments, it is important to focus on nonautistic people's knowledge and attitude towards autistic people and also their ability to use helpful communication behaviours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Is camouflaging unique for autism? A comparison of camouflaging between adults with autism and ADHD.
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van der Putten, W. J., Mol, A. J. J., Groenman, A. P., Radhoe, T. A., Torenvliet, C., van Rentergem, J. A. Agelink, and Geurts, H. M.
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Camouflaging (using (un)conscious strategies to appear as non‐autistic) is thought to be an important reason for late autism diagnoses and mental health difficulties. However, it is unclear whether only autistic people camouflage or whether people with other neurodevelopmental or mental health conditions also use similar camouflaging strategies. Therefore, in this preregistered study (AsPredicted: #41811) study, we investigated if adults with attention‐deficit/hyperactivity‐disorder (ADHD) also camouflage. Adults aged 30–90 years filled in the Dutch Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire (CAT‐Q‐NL), the ADHD Self‐Report (ADHD‐SR) and the Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ). We investigated differences in camouflaging between adults with ADHD, autism, and a comparison group in an age and sex‐matched subsample (N = 105 per group). We explored if autism and ADHD traits explained camouflaging levels in adults with an autism and/or ADHD diagnosis (N = 477). Adults with ADHD scored higher on total camouflaging and assimilation subscale compared to the comparison group. However, adults with ADHD scored lower on total camouflaging, and subscales compensation and assimilation than autistic adults. Autism traits, but not ADHD traits, were a significant predictor of camouflaging, independent of diagnosis. Thus, camouflaging does not seem to be unique to autistic adults, since adults with ADHD also show camouflaging behavior, even though not as much as autistic adults. However, as the CAT‐Q‐NL specifically measures camouflaging of autistic traits it is important to develop more general measures of camouflaging, to compare camouflaging more reliably in people with different mental health conditions. Furthermore, focusing on camouflaging in adults with ADHD, including potential consequences for late diagnoses and mental health seems a promising future research avenue. Lay Summary: In the present study, we investigated whether only autistic people use strategies to hide one's autistic traits (also referred to as camouflaging) or whether people with ADHD use similar strategies. We found that people with ADHD reported more camouflaging behavior compared to a neurotypical comparison group, but less than autistic people. Thus, these results indicate that camouflaging is not unique for autism and it is important to be aware of camouflaging strategies in people with ADHD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Exploring camouflaging by the Chinese version Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire in Taiwanese autistic and non-autistic adolescents: An initial development.
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Liu, Chun-Hao, Chen, Yi-Lung, Chen, Pei-Jung, Ni, Hsing-Chang, and Lai, Meng-Chuan
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EXPERIMENTAL design , *RELIABILITY (Personality trait) , *RESEARCH , *STATISTICAL reliability , *RESEARCH methodology , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *SELF-evaluation , *ACCULTURATION , *TAIWANESE people , *AUTISM in adolescence , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers , *FACTOR analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *EVALUATION ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Camouflaging is a strategy adopted by neurodivergent individuals to cope in neurotypical social contexts, likely related to perceived stress. Despite increasing research in autistic adults, studies of camouflaging in adolescents remain sparse. The self-reported Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire has been validated in adults in some Western societies, but not in non-Western populations. We examined the psychometric properties of the self-reported and caregiver-reported Chinese version Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire in Taiwanese adolescents. We enrolled 100 autistic and 105 non-autistic adolescents (aged 12–18 years) and their caregivers. As an initial development, we found a two-factor structure ("compensation-masking" and "assimilation") via exploratory factor analysis, alongside good internal consistency and test–retest reliability, for both the self-reported and caregiver-reported Chinese version Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire. Self-reported and caregiver-reported Chinese version Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire scores were moderately to highly correlated. Autistic adolescents showed higher total Chinese version Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire and assimilation scores than non-autistic adolescents in both males and females. Female autistic adolescents showed higher assimilation than male autistic adolescents, but there was no significant difference between sex assigned at birth on compensation-masking in either autistic or non-autistic adolescents. Assimilation correlated with higher self-perceived stress for both autistic and non-autistic adolescents. Both self-reported and caregiver-reported Chinese version Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire were reliable and offered meaningful information to understand social coping of Taiwanese autistic and non-autistic adolescents. Camouflaging is a coping strategy used by some autistic and other neurodivergent people to fit in neurotypical social contexts. The self-reported Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire has been validated for use in research with adults in some Western societies, but not in non-Western cultural-ethnic groups. We translated Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire into traditional Chinese and examined the use of this measure in Taiwanese adolescents via both self-report and caregiver-report in 100 autistic and 105 non-autistic adolescents. Both self-reported and caregiver-reported Chinese version Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire were composed of two factors (i.e. a "compensation-masking" subscale and an "assimilation" subscale). Both adolescent self-reported and caregiver-reported Chinese version Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire total score and subscales were reliable in measurement, and they highly correlated with each other. Taiwanese autistic adolescents were more likely to camouflage than non-autistic adolescents, especially on assimilation. Female autistic adolescents showed higher assimilation than male autistic adolescents. Higher camouflaging, especially assimilation, was associated with higher stress in autistic and non-autistic adolescents alike. Both self-reported and caregiver-reported Chinese version Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire were reliable and offered meaningful information to help us understand the social coping experiences of autistic and non-autistic adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Exploring autistic adults' psychosocial experiences affecting beginnings, continuity and change in camouflaging over time: A qualitative study in Singapore.
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Loo, Beatrice Rui Yi, Teo, Truman Jing Yang, Liang, Melanie Jiamin, Leong, Dawn-Joy, Tan, Diana Weiting, Zhuang, Sici, Hull, Laura, Livingston, Lucy A, Mandy, Will, Happé, Francesca, and Magiati, Iliana
- Subjects
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RESEARCH , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *SELF-perception , *INTERVIEWING , *GROUP identity , *EXPERIENCE , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *QUALITATIVE research , *SOUTHEAST Asians , *AUTISM , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *RESEARCH funding , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *SOCIAL skills , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *THEMATIC analysis , *ADULTS , *MIDDLE age - Abstract
Camouflaging (or otherwise referred to as masking or passing) involves hiding one's autistic-related characteristics and differences to get by in social situations in predominantly non-autistic societies. Very little is known to date about the course of camouflaging motivations and strategies over time or the psychosocial factors that may influence autistic people's camouflaging choices and trajectories. In an exploratory qualitative study within an Asian sociocultural context, we interviewed 11 Singaporean autistic adults (9 males, 2 females, aged 22–45 years) about their camouflaging experiences to better understand (1) their camouflaging motivations and strategies over time, and (2) related psychosocial influences. Organised across four phases (pre-camouflaging, beginnings, continuity and change over time), 17 themes relating to camouflaging motivations and 8 themes relating to strategies were identified. The earliest camouflaging motivations were predominantly relational, linked to a negative self-identity that had been shaped by adverse social experiences. Camouflaging strategies became increasingly complex and integrated into one's sense of self over time. Our findings highlight the role of psychosocial pressures precipitating camouflaging and emphasise the need for individual and societal changes, including moving towards enhanced acceptance and inclusion to reduce psychosocial pressures on autistic people to camouflage. Over their lifetimes, many autistic people learn to camouflage (hide or mask) their autism-related differences to forge relationships, find work and live independently in largely non-autistic societies. Autistic adults have described camouflaging as a 'lifetime of conditioning... to act normal' involving 'years of effort', suggesting that camouflaging develops over an autistic person's lifetime and may start early on, in childhood or adolescence. Yet, we know very little about why and how autistic people start to camouflage, or why and how their camouflaging behaviours continue or change over time. We interviewed 11 Singaporean autistic adults (9 male, 2 female, 22–45 years old) who shared their camouflaging experiences. We found that autistic adults' earliest motivations to camouflage were largely related to the desire to fit in and connect with others. They also camouflaged to avoid difficult social experiences (such as being teased or bullied). Autistic adults shared that their camouflaging behaviours became more complex and that, for some, camouflaging became a part of their self-identity over time. Our findings suggest that society should not pathologise autistic differences, but instead accept and include autistic people, to reduce the pressure on autistic people to hide who they truly are. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Does camouflaging predict age at autism diagnosis? A comparison of autistic men and women.
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Milner, Victoria, Colvert, Emma, Hull, Laura, Cook, Julia, Ali, Dorota, Mandy, William, and Happé, Francesca
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It is frequently reported that females are likely to receive an autism diagnosis at a later age than their male counterparts, despite similar levels of autistic traits. It has been suggested that this delay in diagnosis may in part reflect the propensity of females, more than males, to engage in camouflaging behaviors that reduce the appearance of autism‐related traits. This article presents two studies which examined the relationship between gender/sex, camouflaging, and age at diagnosis in two samples of (cis‐gender) autistic adults. Study 1 included data from three online samples including 242 autistic men and 570 autistic women aged 18–75 years. Study 2 included data from a longitudinal population‐based sample including 24 autistic men and 35 autistic women aged 20–24 years. Camouflaging was measured with the self‐report Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire (CAT‐Q). Overall, the results showed that, on average, females were diagnosed later than males. There was a stronger relationship between camouflaging and age at autism diagnosis (AaD) for females, compared with males. Within sample one, there was a significant camouflaging‐by‐sex interaction; high‐camouflaging females had a later AaD. The role of autistic traits and changes in attitudes towards female autism and camouflaging need further exploration. These findings highlight the need for greater clinician and key stakeholder awareness and understanding of camouflaging behavior, particularly for females, during the diagnostic process. Lay Summary: Autistic females receive an autism diagnosis, on average, later than autistic males. This may be because autistic females use strategies to appear less autistic, which means they are less likely to be diagnosed. These strategies are known as "camouflaging." In this study, we looked at whether camouflaging is related to the age at which someone receives an autism diagnosis. We looked to see whether this relationship was different for autistic males and females in two samples of autistic adults. Overall, the females were diagnosed later than the males. The participants' self‐reported camouflaging scores were related to age at diagnosis, and even more so for autistic females compared with males. Females who had high camouflaging scores were diagnosed later. This study highlights the need for a better understanding of camouflaging, especially during the diagnostic process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Sex Differences and Parent–Teacher Discrepancies in Reports of Autism Traits: Evidence for Camouflaging in a School Setting
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Putnam, Orla C., McFayden, Tyler C., and Harrop, Clare
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- 2024
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32. Camouflaging in Autistic Adults is Modulated by Autistic and Neurotypical Characteristics of Interaction Partners
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Funawatari, Ren, Sumiya, Motofumi, Iwabuchi, Toshiki, Nishimura, Tomoko, Komeda, Hidetsugu, and Senju, Atsushi
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- 2024
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33. Theory of Mind in Autism: From a Primary Deficit to Just Mutual Misunderstanding?
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Erena-Guardia, Gema, Vulchanova, Mila, Saldaña, David, Rahman, Shahid, Series Editor, Redmond, Juan, Managing Editor, van Eemeren, Frans H., Editorial Board Member, McConaughey, Zoe, Editorial Board Member, Street, Tony, Editorial Board Member, Woods, John, Editorial Board Member, Galvez-Behar, Gabriel, Editorial Board Member, Gazziero, Leone, Editorial Board Member, Laks, André, Editorial Board Member, Webb, Ruth, Editorial Board Member, Dubucs, Jacques, Editorial Board Member, Chemla, Karine, Editorial Board Member, Hansson, Sven Ove, Editorial Board Member, Coello, Yann, Editorial Board Member, Gregoire, Eric, Editorial Board Member, Prakken, Henry, Editorial Board Member, Recanati, François, Editorial Board Member, Heinzmann, Gerhard, Editorial Board Member, Smets, Sonja, Editorial Board Member, Sundholm, Göran, Editorial Board Member, Crubellier, Michel, Editorial Board Member, Gabbay, Dov, Editorial Board Member, Tulenheimo, Tero, Editorial Board Member, Contamin, Jean-Gabriel, Editorial Board Member, Fischer, Franck, Editorial Board Member, Ober, Josh, Editorial Board Member, Pichard, Marc, Editorial Board Member, Lopez-Soto, Teresa, editor, Garcia-Lopez, Alvaro, editor, and Salguero-Lamillar, Francisco J., editor
- Published
- 2023
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34. Hardware Security of SFQ Circuits
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Jabbari, Tahereh, Mustafa, Yerzhan, Friedman, Eby G., Köse, Selçuk, and Topaloglu, Rasit O., editor
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- 2023
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35. Hardware Security Primitives Based on Emerging Technologies
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Tehranipoor, Mark, Pundir, Nitin, Vashistha, Nidish, Farahmandi, Farimah, Tehranipoor, Mark, Pundir, Nitin, Vashistha, Nidish, and Farahmandi, Farimah
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- 2023
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36. An investigation into camouflaging behaviour in pupils with Autism Spectrum Disorder and its impact on their education, from the perspective of their parents
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Boyle, Fionuala
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Autism Spectrum Disorder ,ASD ,adolescent ,camouflaging ,masking ,compensation ,assimilation - Abstract
There is very little research which focuses on the impact of camouflaging behaviour on the education of adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), from the perspective of parents. This research was a mixed methods study which sought to explore this topic in a population of parents who have children with an ASD diagnosis who attend post-primary school in Northern Ireland (NI). For the quantitative phase, participants were accessed through schools, ASD charities, parent-led groups and through the Queens University School of Psychology Twitter page. Participants were then offered the opportunity to take part in semi-structured interviews. Fifty-six questionnaires and seven interviews were completed. Descriptive and inferential statistics were employed to present the quantitative data and qualitative data was analysed using Thematic Analysis. Resulting themes reflected previous research findings in this field. Additional findings were that young people sought to hide their educational needs and that females may have employed more deliberate camouflaging strategies than males. Parents also saw themselves as having a role to play in their children's education and they viewed communication and collaboration as key. Implications of this research are that post-primary school staff may benefit from ASD training and that acceptance of diversity should be promoted within post-primary schools. It may be helpful for school staff to support students with ASD to manage their exhaustion and they could utilise the expert knowledge of parents.
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- 2021
37. The dimensional structure of the Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire (CAT-Q) and predictors of camouflaging in a representative general population sample
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Wei Ai, William A. Cunningham, and Meng-Chuan Lai
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autism ,camouflaging ,impression management ,psychometric ,socio-motivational predictors ,cognitive predictors ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Objectives: Some autistic people “camouflage” their differences by modeling neurotypical behaviors to survive in a neurotypical-dominant social world. It remains elusive whether camouflaging is unique to autism or if it entails similar experiences across human groups as part of ubiquitous impression management (IM). Here we examined camouflaging engagement and theoretical drivers in the general population, drawing on the transactional IM framework and contextualizing findings within both contemporary autism research and the past IM literature. Methods: A large representative U.S. general population sample (N = 972) completed this survey study. We combined exploratory item factor analysis and graph analysis to triangulate the dimensional structure of the Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire (CAT-Q) and examined its correspondence with prior autism-enriched psychometric findings. We then employed hierarchical regression and elastic-net regression to identify the predictors of camouflaging, including demographic (e.g., age, gender), neurodivergence (i.e., autistic and ADHD traits), socio-motivational, and cognitive factors. Results: We found a three-factor/dimensional structure of the CAT-Q in the general population, nearly identical to that found in previous autism-enriched samples. Significant socio-motivational predictors of camouflaging included greater social comparison, greater public self-consciousness, greater internalized social stigma, and greater social anxiety. These camouflaging drivers overlap with findings in recent autistic camouflaging studies and prior IM research. Conclusions: The novel psychometric and socio-motivational evidence demonstrates camouflaging as a shared social coping experience across the general population, including autistic people. This continuity guides a clearer understanding of camouflaging and has key implications for autism scholars, clinicians, and the broader clinical intersecting with social psychology research. Future research areas are mapped to elucidate how camouflaging/IM manifests and functions within person-environment transactions across social-identity and clinical groups.
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- 2024
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38. Towards the measurement of autistic burnout.
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Arnold, Samuel RC, Higgins, Julianne M, Weise, Janelle, Desai, Aishani, Pellicano, Elizabeth, and Trollor, Julian N
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RESEARCH , *EMPATHY , *FUNCTIONAL status , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *MASKING (Psychology) , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *ATTITUDES toward illness , *AUTISM , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *FACTOR analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *FATIGUE (Physiology) , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Studies are emerging documenting the experience of fatigue, exhaustion and loss of functioning that has long been described by autistic adults as autistic burnout. New assessment tools are needed to enable identification and diagnosis. Here, we sought to identify factors associated with severity, develop an autistic burnout assessment and test the prepublication AASPIRE Autistic Burnout Measure tool. A co-produced survey of 141 autistic adults with experience of autistic burnout (98% above cut-off for depression) was subjected to exploratory factor analysis and scale reduction to identify a grouping of Autistic Burnout Severity Items. Autistic Burnout Severity Items showed strong overall internal consistency and acceptable internal consistency across four factors. Masking and depression were associated with the Autistic Burnout Severity Items, once variation in alexithymia, interoception, repetitive behaviours, sensory sensitivities and autism severity had been adjusted for. There is some suggestion that the Autistic Burnout Measure may not be as robust as the Autistic Burnout Severity Items, particularly as it showed a significant relationship with depression but not masking. Our findings alongside recent literature highlight a core phenomenon, comprising exhaustion, withdrawal and cognitive overload, associated with stressors potentially unique to autistic people. Further disambiguation from autistic shutdown and other conditions is needed in work towards the measurement of autistic burnout. Autistic burnout has been talked about by autistic adults for some time on blogs and in social media. Now, research describes fatigue, exhaustion and other related symptoms experienced by autistic people. We need new ways to help identify autistic burnout. In this study, we tested a new questionnaire called the AASPIRE Autistic Burnout Measure, and we investigated things that are linked to worse autistic burnout. We also trialled a group of Autistic Burnout Severity Items that we made. Working with an autistic researcher, we made the Autistic Burnout Severity Items based on published definitions of autistic burnout. Autistic adults (n = 141) who had experienced autistic burnout completed an online survey. We found that autistic burnout was connected to masking and depression. The Autistic Burnout Measure tool was associated with depression but not with masking. It was not very accurate in telling apart participants who were currently experiencing burnout versus those who were reporting on their past experience. The Autistic Burnout Severity Items might have problems with subscales adding together to measure autistic burnout. More work is needed on how to measure autistic burnout. Our research and other recent studies show autistic people experience a combination of exhaustion, withdrawal and problems with their concentration and thinking. Burnout seems to be linked to the stress experienced by autistic people in their daily lives. We need more research to understand the difference between autistic burnout and other conditions and experiences. We need to develop assessment tools that can help identify this burnout. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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39. Confirming the nature of autistic burnout.
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Arnold, Samuel RC, Higgins, Julianne M, Weise, Janelle, Desai, Aishani, Pellicano, Elizabeth, and Trollor, Julian N
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EXECUTIVE function , *AUTISM , *TERMS & phrases , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *CONTENT analysis , *THEMATIC analysis , *DIAGNOSTIC errors , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *DISEASE complications ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Autistic burnout is an experience commonly described by autistic people (#AutBurnout and #AutisticBurnout on social media). Recently, two definitions of this syndrome have been published. Both describe debilitating exhaustion with onset related to various stressors including masking, though several differences exist, such as the characteristic of interpersonal withdrawal. We sought to explore the content validity of these definitions including duration and frequency criteria, using descriptive statistics, content analysis and reflexive thematic analysis. A co-produced survey of 141 autistic adults with experience of autistic burnout showed strong endorsement of the definition by Higgins et al., where exhaustion and interpersonal withdrawal occur alongside reduced functioning, executive functioning difficulties, and increased manifestation of autistic traits. Duration and frequency criteria were unresolved, with qualitative data highlighting varying (both acute and chronic) experiences. Autistic burnout is frequently misdiagnosed as depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, borderline personality disorder or other conditions. Work is needed to increase community and clinician awareness, as well as initiatives to improve unaccommodating neurotypical environments. More research and validation are needed in larger samples not restricted to autistic adults who have experienced autistic burnout to determine prevalence and risk factors as well as duration and frequency. Autistic burnout is something autistic people have been talking about for a while (see #AutBurnout and #AutisticBurnout on social media). Recently, researchers published two different definitions of autistic burnout. We wanted to test these definitions. We wanted to confirm the duration and frequency of autistic burnout. That is, how long and how often do people get autistic burnout? We surveyed 141 autistic adults who had autistic burnout. We used descriptive statistics, content analysis and reflexive thematic analysis to analyse the survey responses. Autistic adults strongly agreed with the definition published by Higgins et al. How long and how often people get autistic burnout was not clear. Participants told us they have both short and long episodes. Participants told us that autistic burnout leads to exhaustion. They needed to withdraw from being with other people. They needed to stay away from autism unfriendly places. Many had been misdiagnosed as having depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, borderline personality disorder or other conditions. We need increased awareness of autistic burnout. Autistic people need more help. More research is needed, we need to have bigger studies to understand autistic burnout. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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40. 'If I'm just me, I doubt I'd get the job': A qualitative exploration of autistic people's experiences in job interviews.
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Finn, Mikaela, Flower, Rebecca L, Leong, Han Ming, and Hedley, Darren
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EMPLOYMENT interviewing , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERVIEWING , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *QUALITATIVE research , *AUTISM , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *HEALTH behavior , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Autistic people face many challenges entering the workforce, for example, during job interviews where performance is reliant on particular social skills. To be competitive during job interviews, autistic people may experience pressure to conceal or 'camouflage' their autistic traits and behaviour. This qualitative study used semi-structured interviews to explore the job interview experiences of 10 autistic people. Based on the literature, we were curious as to whether participants would report behaviour consistent with the camouflaging hypothesis. Thematic analysis identified six themes reflecting individual and environmental factors. Participants reported engaging in camouflaging behaviour during job interviews, with external factors (e.g. avoid being treated differently) cited as the primary reason. Participants reported that camouflaging required effort, leading to stress, anxiety, exhaustion and feeling 'burnt out'. They expressed a desire for an inclusive, understanding and accommodating environment where they would feel more comfortable disclosing their diagnosis without feeling they needed to conceal their autistic traits and behaviour. These preliminary findings add to the current literature regarding autism, camouflaging and employment. When applying for a job, autistic job candidates are likely to face a number of challenges. Job interviews are one of these challenges – they require communicating and relationship-building with unfamiliar people and involve expectations about behaviour (that may vary between companies and are not made clear to job candidates). Given autistic people communicate differently to non-autistic people, autistic job candidates may be disadvantaged in the interview process. Autistic candidates may not feel comfortable or safe sharing with organisations their autistic identity and may feel pressure to hide any characteristics or behaviour they feel might indicate they are autistic. To explore this issue, we interviewed 10 autistic adults about their job interview experiences in Australia. We analysed the content of the interviews and found three themes that related to the individual person and three themes that related to environmental factors. Participants told us that they engaged in camouflaging behaviour during job interviews, feeling pressure to conceal aspects of themselves. Those who camouflaged during job interviews reported that it took a lot of effort, which resulted in increased stress, anxiety and exhaustion. The autistic adults we spoke to reported a need for inclusive, understanding and accommodating employers to help them feel more comfortable disclosing their autism diagnosis in the job application process. These findings add to current research that has explored camouflaging behaviour and barriers to employment for autistic people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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41. Organizational benefits of neurodiversity: Preliminary findings on autism and the bystander effect.
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Hartman, Lorne M., Farahani, Mehrdad, Moore, Alexander, Manzoor, Ateeya, and Hartman, Braxton L.
- Abstract
Although the bystander effect is one of the most important findings in the psychological literature, researchers have not explored whether autistic individuals are prone to the bystander effect. The present research examines whether autistic employees are more likely to report issues or concerns in an organization's systems and practices that are inefficient or dysfunctional. By bringing attention to these issues, autistic employees may foster opportunities to improve organizational performance, leading to the development of a more adaptive, high performing, and ethical culture. Thirty‐three autistic employees and 34 nonautistic employees completed an online survey to determine whether employees on the autism spectrum (1) are more likely to report they would voice concerns about organizational dysfunctions, (2) are less likely to report they were influenced by the number of other witnesses to the dysfunction, (3) if they do not voice concerns, are more likely to acknowledge the influence of other people on the decision, (4) are less likely to formulate "elaborate rationales" for their decisions to intervene or not, and (5) whether any differences between autistic and nonautistic employees with regards to the first two hypotheses, intervention likelihood and degree of influence, are moderated by individual differences in camouflaging. Results indicate that autistic employees may be less susceptible to the bystander effect than nonautistic employees. As a result, autistic employees may contribute to improvements in organizational performance because they are more likely to identify and report inefficient processes and dysfunctional practices when they witness them. These preliminary findings suggesting potential benefits of neurodiversity in the workplace are promising. However, further research is required. Lay Summary: According to the bystander effect, when witnessing situations that are inappropriate or harmful, the likelihood of intervening and its promptness decreases with increasing group size. Although the bystander effect is one of the most important findings in the psychological literature, researchers have not explored whether autistic individuals are prone to the bystander effect. This preliminary study suggests that autistic employees may be less prone to the bystander effect than nonautistic employees and, as a result, contribute to improved organizational effectiveness and performance because of an increased willingness to identify and report inefficient processes or dysfunctional practices when they witness them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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42. The forensic implications of camouflaging: a study into victimisation and offending associated with autism and pathological demand avoidance
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Trundle, Grace, Jones, Katy A., Ropar, Danielle, and Egan, Vincent
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- 2023
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43. It is More Anxiousness than Role-playing: Social Camouflaging Conceptualization Among Adults on the Autism Spectrum Compared to Persons with Social Anxiety Disorder
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Pyszkowska, Anna
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- 2024
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44. The Role of Everyday Executive Function in Observed Social Symptoms of Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Burroughs, Christina, Muscatello, Rachael A., and Corbett, Blythe A.
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- 2024
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45. Hybrid Shielding: Amplifying the Power of Camouflaging and Logic Encryption
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Nikhil Saxena and Ranga Vemuri
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Camouflaging ,emerging devices ,hardware security ,hack tests ,logic encryption ,output corruption rate ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
In the semiconductor industry, protecting Integrated Circuits (IC) throughout the IC supply chain has become a major concern. In-depth research has been done on logic encryption, split manufacturing, and layout camouflaging to safeguard ICs against attacks at various stages of the supply chain. In this work, we introduce a hybrid, method called Hybrid Shielding (which amplifies the power of camouflaging and logic locking) to protect ICs at each stage of the supply chain, including the foundry, the testing facility, and the end user. We take advantage of the spin-based device, called the Giant Spin-Hall Effect (GSHE) switch, multi-functionality, post-fabrication reconfigurability, and run-time polymorphism to make dynamic camouflaging resistant to SAT-based attacks and test-data mining-based attacks. These characteristics are not available to designers in CMOS. We define two metrics for circuit nodes: stability and weight. Hybrid Shielding replaces all of the selected gates with polymorphic gates. It uses a simulator to ascertain the internal state of the selected nodes. The camouflaged internal state will be used to corrupt the functionality of the primary outputs. The resulting locked circuit has high output corruption rates and is resilient to the SAT attack, Hack Test, as well as several other attacks. These results are demonstrated experimentally using standard benchmark circuits.
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- 2023
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46. Applications of identity-based theories to understand the impact of stigma and camouflaging on mental health outcomes for autistic people.
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Rivera, Rachel A. and Bennetto, Loisa
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AUTISTIC people ,SOCIAL model of disability ,MENTAL health ,MINORITY stress ,SOCIAL stigma - Abstract
Autistic people have long been conceptualized from a deficit-based model of disability, but recent self-advocates and scholars have asserted the importance of recognizing autism as both a disability and an important part of a person's social identity. The autistic identity is subject to specific stigma and stressors beyond everyday discrimination and prejudice, which can have many downstream implications on mental health and well-being. Prior research on camouflaging has explained both quantitatively and qualitatively how autistic people conform to norms and mask their autistic traits to better fit in with non-autistic societal standards. Given this paradigm shift in understanding autistic peoples' lived experiences, researchers must also begin to reshape the theories guiding their work in order to improve diagnosis, intervention, and supports. This review examines the extant research on identity-related stigma and camouflaging and their subsequent impacts on mental health outcomes in autism. A model is proposed integrating identity-based theories--specifically the social model of disability, social identity theory, and minority stress model--to explain relationships across research areas and better explain the experiences of autistic people. We discuss how identity-based theories can be applied in autism research to better understand the impacts of stigma and camouflaging on autistic peoples' lived experiences and reduce disparities in their mental health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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47. Are there gender-based variations in the presentation of Autism amongst female and male children?
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Simcoe, Sarah Mae, Gilmour, John, Garnett, Michelle S., Attwood, Tony, Donovan, Caroline, and Kelly, Adrian B.
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SENSES , *SEX distribution , *IMAGINATION , *GENDER identity , *AUTISM , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) , *PATIENT compliance , *SOCIAL skills , *EARLY diagnosis , *SYMPTOMS , *CHILDREN - Abstract
The Questionnaire for Autism Spectrum Conditions (Q-ASC; Attwood, Garnett & Rynkiewicz, 2011) is one of the few screening instruments that includes items designed to assess female-specific ASD-Level 1 traits. This study examined the ability of a modified version of the Q-ASC (Q-ASC-M; Ormond et al., 2018) to differentiate children with and without ASD-Level 1. Participants included 111 parents of autistic children and 212 parents of neurotypical children (5–12 years). Results suggested that the gendered behaviour, sensory sensitivity, compliant behaviours, imagination, and imitation subscales differentiated autistic females from neurotypical females. Compared to autistic males, autistic females had higher scores on gendered behaviour, sensory sensitivity, social masking, and imitation. Results are discussed in relation to early detection of autistic female children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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48. Is camouflaging autistic traits associated with defeat, entrapment, and lifetime suicidal thoughts? Expanding the Integrated Motivational Volitional Model of Suicide.
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Cassidy, Sarah, McLaughlin, Emily, McGranaghan, Rachel, Pelton, Mirabel, O'Connor, Rory, and Rodgers, Jacqui
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- *
SUICIDAL ideation , *COMPUTER adaptive testing , *SUICIDAL behavior , *SUICIDE , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *AUTISM spectrum disorders - Abstract
Introduction: The current study explored whether camouflaging autistic traits is associated with defeat and entrapment and lifetime suicidal thoughts, as predicted by the Integrated Volitional Model of Suicide (IMV model). Methods: 180 UK undergraduate students (76.7% female 18–67 years) completed a cross‐sectional online survey from February 5 to March 23, 2020, including self‐report measures of defeat and entrapment (SDES), autistic traits (AQ‐10), depression (PHQ‐9), anxiety (GAD‐7), camouflaging autistic traits (CAT‐Q), and lifetime suicidal thoughts and behaviors (SBQ‐R item 1). Results: After controlling for age, gender, current depression, and anxiety symptoms, autistic traits accounted for significantly more of the variance in defeat and entrapment (1.1%), and camouflaging accounted for a further 3.2% of the variance. The association between autistic traits and lifetime suicidality was significantly mediated by camouflaging, defeat, and entrapment. After controlling for age, gender, current depression, and anxiety symptoms, defeat and entrapment (but not camouflaging) accounted for significantly more variance in lifetime suicidal thoughts. The interaction between camouflaging, defeat and entrapment predicted significantly less variance in lifetime suicidal thoughts than either variable alone. Conclusion: Results suggest that camouflaging autistic traits is a transdiagnostic risk factor for lifetime suicidality, relevant to the defeat and entrapment constructs of the IMV model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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49. Camouflaging in Developmental Language Disorder: The Views of Speech and Language Pathologists and Parents.
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Hobson, Hannah M. and Lee, Annabel
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NEURODIVERSITY , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *RESEARCH methodology , *PARENTS of children with disabilities , *GROUNDED theory , *INTERVIEWING , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *LANGUAGE acquisition , *QUALITATIVE research , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIAL skills , *NEEDS assessment , *DATA analysis software , *LANGUAGE disorders , *SPEECH therapists , *CHILD development deviations , *MEDICAL needs assessment - Abstract
The term camouflaging describes behaviors that cover up neurodivergent difficulties. While researched in autism, camouflaging has received no systematic study in other conditions affecting communication, including developmental language disorder (DLD). This study explored camouflaging in DLD, drawing on the experience and expertise of speech and language pathologists and parents of children with DLD. Using a qualitative descriptive design, we interviewed six speech and language pathologists and six parents of children with DLD. The inductive thematic analysis considered three broad topic areas: What camouflaging behaviors do children with DLD do, the impacts of camouflaging, and what factors are associated with camouflaging. Camouflaging took a range of forms, with eight common presentations identified. Camouflaging reportedly delayed recognition of children's language needs and affected interventions. Camouflaging reportedly impacted children's exhaustion, mental health, self-esteem, personality, friendships, and how others view them. Research characterizing camouflaging in DLD could help reduce the underdetection of children's language needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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50. Mediating Role of Perceived Stigma and Camouflaging in Relationship between Autistic Identity and Wellbeing among Autistic Adults.
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Attaullah, Sumayyah, Khalil, Saira, and Qamar, Raheela Fauzia
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WELL-being ,SOCIAL stigma ,QUALITY of life ,ADULTS ,GROUP identity ,MENTAL health - Abstract
The present study was conducted to investigate the mediating role of perceived stigma and camouflaging in relationship between autistic identity and psychological wellbeing among autistic adults. This study investigates how the complex social identity of autistic adults, affects their wellbeing and how frequent stigma in various contexts results in camouflaging, potentially worsening mental health and preventing the development of a strong autistic identity. The study was conducted on autistic adults (N=400). Autism Spectrum Identity Scale, Stigma Consciousness Scale, Camouflaging of Autistic Traits Questionnaire and Warwick Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale were used for data collection. The results showed that there was a mediating effect. Higher autistic identity was related to positive psychological wellbeing and less stigma. Higher stigma related to more camouflaging which is correlated to poorer wellbeing. Promoting societal awareness and acceptance of autism will contribute to improve the quality of life for autistic adults, promoting their overall wellbeing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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