Tiny samples, though.
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Yes, but the stats did not indicate this was an issue in this case -- effect sizes very large.
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Aaargh Twitter isn't letting me reply. Sorry I am just testing whether I can respond.
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Ok, I think Twitter doesn't like the link I'm trying to include? Try this, scroll down to the male face. Typical masculine face. Looks nothing like a typical autistic male face.
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I don't know how they measured "facial masculinization," but there's no way the typical autist has a more masculine face by any normal way people use those words.
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If only you could read the paper to find out...
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1/Now use degree of facial masculinization as a predictor of H-index among females in the sciences! - Srsly tho, this is pretty remarkable evidence of the Cohen/extreme-male brain theory, but I continue to think the construct "ASD" is outdated, and should yield for work of this
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2/this kind to some operationalization of the geno&phenotype under discussion. We're in a state where a bunch of sub-ASD disorders are known, which are all classified as "ASD;" ASD qua ASD research is in a backwater similar to cognitive psych in the era of behaviorism.
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extreme male brain theory comes to mind.
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They couldn't use a square or diamond to represent one of these lines? Really?
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Wait never mind, sorry, two of those are squares, aren't they? Just so small they look like circles.
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How did they construct the curve for ASD Boys? Samples shown don't seem to correspond to the probability indicated by the curve. Sorry, I'm too lazy to find out the answer from the paper..
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