I've had some luck with "Narrative Analysis" as a way to ground my thinking. Building up chains of thought here on twitter work well for that as it anchors me toward a rough timelines even when I am not aware of it myself. Related:https://twitter.com/ultimape/status/819347216745775106 …
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The fun inference here is that I can also reverse the cause-and-effect bits. I always thought it was odd that I will often replay memento in reverse in my head. I even sometimes forget that they are in reverse order in the real movie until I remember that's the 'trick' it pulls.
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I can't remember the exact way it was phrased, but I remember that a section of "The stuff of thought" by
@sapinker talks about how cause-and-effect is encoded in language. But again, this is where autism is weird and suggests he's not considering that aspect.1 reply 0 retweets 0 likesShow this thread -
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Specifically, if you watch https://www.ted.com/talks/ajit_narayanan_a_word_game_to_communicate_in_any_language … - make a note how he discusses that "when"/"tenses" are often not understood intuitively for those on the spectrum. This is my experience as well, and I think is partly why non-24 is common in autistics.https://twitter.com/ultimape/status/816199471818244096 …
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Oddly, IIRC pinker goes into length on how some cultures have differences in their framing of direction and how that manifest in language norms. I'm basically just taking that and applying it to findings on tense/time as it manifests in those without a working model of duration.
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There is some research to back this stuff up. But it was published in 2012. "The stuff of thought" was published in 2007; makes me wonder if Pinker has updated his thinking on the topic?https://www.spectrumnews.org/news/study-finds-grammar-tics-in-children-with-autism/ …
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I do have an appreciation of time passing, but it's like it isn't being incorporated in to my experiential reality. I can recite to you what 'time' is to other people, but seems be meaningless to me. To me it all blurs together as cause/effect.
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Replying to @ultimape
I have a suspicion that autism could relate to how many steps signals penetrate in the brain. If there is for instance too much local connectivity, the brain may dampen weak signals to avoid overflow, but that means that generalization will be shallow, over the previous layer.
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It that is true, then event streams might for instance be remembered as causal order (connection creating history between individual events), and not additionally in relation to a generalized history that is shared across all events (global time).
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Replying to @Plinz
I am on the fence on the cause. It could be a low connectivity thing, or a poor signal strength thing, or purely a malfunctioning area (lesion?). Hard to disambiguate without actually looking at my brain in action, so i'm mostly just guessing as possibilities.
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Absolutely, the diagnosis is mostly symptomatic and not functional. It could be that one receptor type is underperforming, one type of neurotransmitter is not synthesized in your gut, or your motivational biases are not wired up in the standard way or other things.
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Replying to @Plinz
For my own etiology, I think that some kind of signal propagation is an issue. There is a lot of interesting overlap between my Multiple Sclerosis genes associated with mylein and my Autism symptoms. But I did (predict) & find oddness in serotonin and dopamine transmitter genes.
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Demylenation would manifest in connectivity oddness / signal degradation. But MS stuff is not typically something people see in children, and while It got worse after college, I've been weird all my life. Been looking at genes that turn on during brain development in early years.
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