Where Platform Capitalism and Racial Capitalism Meet: The Sociology of Race and Racism in the Digital Society

Open Society
TaSSeLs Tactile Signing for Sensory Learners (2nd edition) - Pavilion Publishing
For staff working with children and young people TaSSels Tactile Signing for Sensory Learners is a training resource pack that promotes effective tactile communication with children and young people who have profound and complex learning disabilities.
Hyper‐focus, sticky attention, and springy attention in young autistic children: Associations with sensory behaviors and cognitive ability
We tracked young autistic children's eye gaze in order to gain insights about how they attend to and experience things around them. Autistic children who were slower to “unstick” their attention from...
We found no evidence that autistic children exhibited greater “sticky attention” than nonautistics, but “sticky attention” in autism was associated with more caregiver-reported sensory hyper-responsiveness, seeking/interests, and enhanced perception.
Autistic children also nonsignificantly trended toward exhibiting reduced novelty preference. Unexpectedly, the time-course of this trending novelty preference difference implied it was not driven by reduced orienting to novelty, but increased returning to already-familiarized stimuli: what we call “springy attention.” Exploratory analyses of data from the attentional disengagement task suggest autistic participants may have exhibited greater “springy attention,” though further research with paradigms optimized for measuring this construct should confirm this. Importantly, “springy attention” was robustly related to reduced cognitive abilities and greater caregiver-reported hypo-responsiveness. Thus, this study illuminates two distinct domain-general attentional patterns, each with distinct correlates in young autistic children, which could have important implications for understanding autistic children's learning, development, and experiences.
One outstanding question is what might happen after study participants look away from the previous focus of their attention in a gap-overlap task or a novelty preference task and begin to focus on a newly-presented stimulus. Do participants often return to their previous focus of attention? Even in enjoyable leisure activities, such as playing video games, humans can exhibit momentary mind-wandering (Varao-Sousa, 2019), suggesting that momentary inattention need not prevent people from quickly returning to a focused state. Thus, we explore whether autistic and nonautistic children orient to a newly-presented stimulus then disengage from it to return to what they were looking at before, a pattern that we call “springy attention.”
we quantified “springy attention” as visual preference to the familiarized stimulus 500–2000 ms after first fixation on the novel stimulus (Figure 5).
Interestingly, among autistic participants, correlations between sensory/cognitive variables and “springy attention,” defined as visual preference to the central target in the overlap condition 500–1000 ms after first fixation on the peripheral target (Figure 7), showed nearly the opposite pattern of statistical significance as correlations with “sticky attention”
Autistic participants displaying more “springy attention” reportedly exhibited more sensory hypo-responsiveness, Spearman's ρ = 0.50, corrected p = 0.02 (Figure 7b), and were assessed as displaying lower cognitive abilities, Spearman's ρ = −0.68, corrected p < 0.0001 (Figure 7e). There were no significant associations with hyper-responsiveness, sensory interests/seeking, or EP, all p ≥ 0.64 (Table 2).
The present study describes two forms of atypical attention in young autistic children: “sticky attention,” the well-studied tendency to disengage attention slowly from stimuli, and what we describe as “springy attention,” the tendency to return to a previous focus of attention after briefly orienting to a newly-presented stimulus. These attentional patterns could be regarded as distinct forms of hyper-focus in autism, which might help begin to clarify some of the conceptual confusion surrounding hyper-focus, monotropism, and how they specifically manifest and relate to one another.
In contrast to some prior studies (Sacrey et al., 2014), we did not observe heightened “sticky attention” in the autistic group. However, among autistic participants, we observed robust associations between “sticky attention” and heightened caregiver-reported sensory hyper-responsiveness, sensory interests/seeking, and EP. Meanwhile, we observed a nonsignificant trend toward diminished novelty preference in autism, and though the Bayesian analysis did not suggest it provided evidence to suggest this effect was robust, this prompted us to examine whether it might reflect a “springy attention” pattern rather than failure to orient to novelty. When we then returned to the gap-overlap task, exploring whether similar “springy attention” was evident there, group differences in “springy attention” achieved statistical significance in frequentist analyses, as did associations between autistic participants' “springy attention” and lower cognitive abilities as well as greater sensory hypo-responsiveness.
This study describes distinct forms of atypical attention, and presumably hyper-focus, in young autistic children: “sticky attention,” which has been widely studied, and “springy attention,” a tendency to return to previous focuses of attention after briefly looking away. We did not observe group differences in “sticky attention,” which might reflect the slow timing of stimuli in this study, but we found heightened “springy attention” in autistic people in a gap-overlap task, and more “springy attention” at a trend level in a novelty preference task. “Sticky attention” in autistic participants was robustly associated with caregiver reports of sensory hyper-responsiveness, EP, and sensory interests/seeking, suggesting slow disengagement of attention from stimuli might result in more intense perceptual experiences, with either negative or positive valences depending on stimulus aversiveness. Meanwhile, “springy attention” in young autistic children appeared to be associated with sensory hypo-responsiveness, suggesting that a persistent attentional focus on certain stimuli might lead to other sensory stimuli being ignored. Crucially, we observed a robust association between “springy attention” and lower cognitive abilities in autistic children, suggesting that this persistent focus might prevent opportunities for learning and have cascading effects on development.
Hyper-focus, sticky attention, and springy attention in young autistic children: Associations with sensory behaviors and cognitive ability - PubMed
The autistic-developed monotropism account suggests that atypical, domain-general attentional hyper-focus on interests is a central aspect of autism, but domain-general attention differences in autism can manifest differently. Prior research suggests autistic children are often slow to disengage att …
Am%20 i%20a%20 lesbian %20 masterdoc
(PDF) List of potential Monotropism Questionnaire (MQ) Research Topics.
PDF | For those who only experience monotropic cognitive style, monotropism is everything. it is woven into every aspect of life. It is who you are,... | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ResearchGate
Educational Psychologists for Material Change Position Statement
Educational Psychologists for Material Change (EPMC): Position Statement If you would like to join EPMC please contact us at epsformaterialchange@gmail.com We are a group of educational psychologists and members of the Association of Educational Psychologists (AEP) who are united in our support for a materialist understanding of psychology. We believe an understanding of this philosophical perspective to be vital in promoting social justice within the AEP and our broader profession.
Educational Psychology for Material Change: A call for EPs to join our collective - edpsy.org.uk
Educational Psychologists for Material Change (EPMC) are building a coalition of progressive and radical Educational Psychologists (EPs) to make real...
Psychological safety can only be created through material change in the world.
It is at this point that we might suggest that EP practice often helps to maintain inequality rather than ameliorate it.
Put simply, psychologists tend to encourage children, families, or teachers to speak or think more positively, rather than trying to change the real world around them.
Spring 2024 Round-Up, part 2: Videos and Social Media
Part 1 of this update collected written work published or found since last year’s end-of-Summer round-up. Here we focus mainly on videos and podcasts. Murray, F. (2023, September 20). Monotro…
Spring 2024 Round-Up, part 1: Research and Reading
A seasonal round up from Helen Edgar (Autistic Realms) of research and reading material related monotropism, with contributions from Fergus Murray.It has been a really busy few months with new rese…
The right to ‘home’: human rights and sensory needs on psychiatric wards — Neurodiverse Connection
Charli Clement (NdC Associate) examines the challenging sensory environments of psychiatric inpatient wards in the context of the little-discussed eighth article of the Human Rights Act.
Bert and Ernie are indeed a gay couple, 'Sesame Street' writer claims
Former “Sesame Street” writer Mark Saltzman said Bert and Ernie’s relationship was modeled after his own with his life partner, Arnold Glassman.
A new discovery about carbon dioxide is challenging decades-old ventilation doctrine
CO2 is a good proxy for how much exhaled — and potentially infectious — air is in a room. New research suggests the more CO2 there is, the more virus-friendly the air becomes.
Healing Is Not Linear
Healing Is Not Linear It’s hard to believe but exactly two years ago on June 6, 2022, I had a series of medical crises that led to several weeks in the hospital leaving me without the abilit…
Healing is not linear
Disabled life is precarious. Precarious not just by changes to the body, but the structural ableism that determines the conditions in which we live in.
Beyond accommodations supporting autistic health professionals
RFK Jr.’s Vice-Presidential Pick Drawn in by Debunked Autism Conspira…
archived 3 Jun 2024 16:02:02 UTC
Burlington Police Terrified High School Students With Mock Shooting
Updated at 5:20 p.m. While teaching a class to high school students on Wednesday, Burlington police officers staged a surprise demonstration in which a masked...
What is a Holacracy? The Holacratic Workplace
In a holacratic workplace, there's no traditional leadership hierarchy; team members assume multiple roles. Learn if holacracy is right for your business.
After Jan. 6, Twitter banned 70,000 right-wing accounts. Lies plummeted.
A new study finds deplatforming “super-spreaders” of misinformation can limit the overall spread of online whoppers.
Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA)
Therapist Neurodiversity Collective advocates for trauma-informed, respectful, research-based alternatives to ABA behavior management.
The Coddling of the American Parent
Jonathan Haidt’s new book “The Anxious Generation” blames youth mental health issues on social media in a way that’s easy, wrong, and dangerous.
PECS & ABA | AutisticSLT
Applied Behaviour Analysis (ABA) - Autistic advocates are extremely vocal about abolishing ABA and see it as a human rights issue, due to the medical model which perpetuates the wrong narrative that autistic people need to be treated and fixed, and the number of people it has historically harmed. Learn about why ABA dehumanises autistic people here.
Improving Mental Health Therapies for Autistic Children and Young People: Promoting Self-agency, Curiosity and Collaboration
This unique, collaborative book, featuring contributions from autistic and non-autistic experts, presents cutting-edge thinking on mental health and service transformation in relation to autistic children and young people (CYP) and their families.
Investigating how to implement collaborative approaches to supporting autistic CYP's mental health, the book considers ways for professionals to share power and co-design models of support, promoting self-agency and supportive environments for autistic
Eating Rocks
If the grid goes down, how am I supposed to know how many pebbles to eat?
ARFID: Strategies for Supporting
In this video, I dive into the world of ARFID - Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder. Join me as I unravel the mystery behind this often misunderstood c...
ABA: The Neuro-Normative Conversion Therapy — Neurodiverse Connection
El Dewar examines the shared historical origins of ABA (Applied Behavioural Analysis) and Gay Conversion Therapy in order to compare inhumane practices that function as tools of repression and oppression for Neurodivergent and Queer people.
Ethics and Autism: Rights and Responsibilities within Applied Behaviour Analysis - Research by Ann Memmott PgC MA
Ethics and Autism: Rights and Responsibilities within Applied Behaviour Analysis. Ann Memmott, 2022. My name is Ann Memmott, and I am a...
A Primer on Private Equity Ownership in ABA
Behavior Analysis in Practice - The applied behavior analysis (ABA) service industry is currently estimated to be worth at least $4 billion. As a result of potential profits that can be made from...
Exploring Holotropism : An Autistic and Synaesthetic ramble — Bex Milgate : Psychotherapy & Psychoeducation
I have gone further down the black hole of monotropism (apt I know) and been immersed in holotropism. If you don’t know about monotropism yet, do look here and get into the monotropic zone, it won’t disappoint - https://monotropism.org/ I have been pushing to fully embrace the synaesthetic par
Towards autistic flow theory: A non‐pathologising conceptual approach
The Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour is a theoretical social psychology journal covering human behaviour, psychology, sociology, social policy & more.
Flow states are heightened moments of concentration, motivation and enjoyment, leading to total absorption in the present moment. A striking parallel exists between flow states and phenomenological accounts of autistic daily life.