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artistic_experiences_with_people_with_autism [2018-04-20 10:57] rasaartistic_experiences_with_people_with_autism [2018-04-24 08:30] rasa
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-**Evenementen:**+**Evenementen en activiteiten:** 
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 +Documentatie en visualisatie van **Een digitale doe beurs** in samenwerking met DIGIDAK, Digital Belgium en ‘tpASSt op **13 April 2018** in Geel. Ik was gevraagd een dag lang enkele mensen te volgen en hun ervaringen en activiteiten in beeld brengen.  
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 Workshop **"Analoog naar Digitaal"** als pilot project tussen https://www.gemeentemol.be/saigo en https://www.gemeentemol.be/gibbo  **26 april 2018**. Workshop **"Analoog naar Digitaal"** als pilot project tussen https://www.gemeentemol.be/saigo en https://www.gemeentemol.be/gibbo  **26 april 2018**.
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 ‘because a subset of cues are overly intense, compulsively attended to, excessively processed and remembered with frightening clarity and intensity. Autistic people may, therefore, neither at all be mind-blind nor lack empathy for others, but be hyper-aware of selected fragments of the mind, which may be so intense that they avoid eye contact, withdraw from social interactions and stop communicating.’ ‘because a subset of cues are overly intense, compulsively attended to, excessively processed and remembered with frightening clarity and intensity. Autistic people may, therefore, neither at all be mind-blind nor lack empathy for others, but be hyper-aware of selected fragments of the mind, which may be so intense that they avoid eye contact, withdraw from social interactions and stop communicating.’
  
-For them, this includes not just cognitive-perceptual differences, but also ‘hyper-emotionality’, leading autistic people to become, in their words, ‘trapped in a limited […] internal world’. In turn, subsequent research has seemingly supported this theory, such as a recent study which found precisely that autistic people don’t look others in the eyes, not due to social disinterestedness as previously thought, but rather due to sensory-overload – just as autistic people, and in turn Makram, suggested. by Robert Chapman </blockquote> full article to be found here https://intersectionalneurodiversity.wordpress.com/2018/04/11/are-autistic-people-really-too-sensitive-how-the-intense-world-theory-gaslights-the-autistic-population+For them, this includes not just cognitive-perceptual differences, but also ‘hyper-emotionality’, leading autistic people to become, in their words, ‘trapped in a limited […] internal world’. In turn, subsequent research has seemingly supported this theory, such as a recent study which found precisely that autistic people don’t look others in the eyes, not due to social disinterestedness as previously thought, but rather due to sensory-overload – just as autistic people, and in turn Makram, suggested. **by Robert Chapman** </blockquote> full article to be found here https://intersectionalneurodiversity.wordpress.com/2018/04/11/are-autistic-people-really-too-sensitive-how-the-intense-world-theory-gaslights-the-autistic-population
  
-<blockquote>Neurodiversity proponents argue that autism is a neuro-minority rather than a mental disorder. In short, they deny neither that categories such as autism indicate disabilities, nor indeed the various forms of distress associated with being disabled. Rather, it is that they locate this disablement and distress in society instead of framing it as stemming from a medical pathology in the individual. So an autistic person may, for example, have heightened sensory sensitivity; but they only become disabled in relation to the senses in a world that is not designed to accommodate for this different way of processing, thus leading them, say, to experience sensory overload. by Robert Chapman </blockquote> full article to be found here https://intersectionalneurodiversity.wordpress.com/2018/03/29/is-society-sick-autism-and-the-extended-mind/+<blockquote>Neurodiversity proponents argue that autism is a neuro-minority rather than a mental disorder. In short, they deny neither that categories such as autism indicate disabilities, nor indeed the various forms of distress associated with being disabled. Rather, it is that they locate this disablement and distress in society instead of framing it as stemming from a medical pathology in the individual. So an autistic person may, for example, have heightened sensory sensitivity; but they only become disabled in relation to the senses in a world that is not designed to accommodate for this different way of processing, thus leading them, say, to experience sensory overload. **by Robert Chapman** </blockquote> full article to be found here https://intersectionalneurodiversity.wordpress.com/2018/03/29/is-society-sick-autism-and-the-extended-mind/
  
  
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