A cross-cultural study of autistic traits in the general population

This thesis aimed to explore cross-cultural differences in autistic traits in the Malaysian and British general populations. Freeth et al. (2013) found that Malaysian members of the general population tend to score higher on the Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ; Baron-Cohen, Wheelwright, Skinner, et al....

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Main Author: Abu Bakar, Safira
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69176/
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author Abu Bakar, Safira
author_facet Abu Bakar, Safira
author_sort Abu Bakar, Safira
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis aimed to explore cross-cultural differences in autistic traits in the Malaysian and British general populations. Freeth et al. (2013) found that Malaysian members of the general population tend to score higher on the Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ; Baron-Cohen, Wheelwright, Skinner, et al., 2001) compared to British members of the general population, however, it is unclear whether these findings could reflect genuine cognitive differences or whether these findings are the result of a cultural bias in the questionnaires used. For the current research, I looked at each cognitive behaviour described by the subscales of the AQ in isolation to investigate these findings in detail. Chapter 2 focused on attention-switching on both self-reported measures (the AQ, the Social Responsiveness Scale and the Cognitive Flexibility Scale) and cognition through the use of switch tasks (the Wisconsin Card Sorting Task and the Gender-Emotion Switch Task). Chapter 3 investigated social skills and communication through Theory of Mind by looking at the AQ, an additional measure of culture, the Culture Orientation Scale, the Strange Stories Task and the Reading the Mind in the Eyes task. Chapter 4 explored imagination, as captured through creativity, through self-reported autism traits (AQ) in conjunction with tasks measuring creativity (the Alternative Uses Task and a metaphor generation task). Chapter 5 examined attention to detail by looking at autism traits (AQ) along with the use of a visual search task and a face composite task. The overall findings of this study suggest that self-reported cultural differences in autism traits are partially reflected in cognition, particularly in the domains of attention-switching and social skills and communication. However, there are also strong indicators that the differences in self-reported autism traits between Malaysian and British members of the general population are partially the product of cultural biases embedded in the questionnaires and measures used.
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spelling nottingham-691762022-07-24T04:40:06Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69176/ A cross-cultural study of autistic traits in the general population Abu Bakar, Safira This thesis aimed to explore cross-cultural differences in autistic traits in the Malaysian and British general populations. Freeth et al. (2013) found that Malaysian members of the general population tend to score higher on the Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ; Baron-Cohen, Wheelwright, Skinner, et al., 2001) compared to British members of the general population, however, it is unclear whether these findings could reflect genuine cognitive differences or whether these findings are the result of a cultural bias in the questionnaires used. For the current research, I looked at each cognitive behaviour described by the subscales of the AQ in isolation to investigate these findings in detail. Chapter 2 focused on attention-switching on both self-reported measures (the AQ, the Social Responsiveness Scale and the Cognitive Flexibility Scale) and cognition through the use of switch tasks (the Wisconsin Card Sorting Task and the Gender-Emotion Switch Task). Chapter 3 investigated social skills and communication through Theory of Mind by looking at the AQ, an additional measure of culture, the Culture Orientation Scale, the Strange Stories Task and the Reading the Mind in the Eyes task. Chapter 4 explored imagination, as captured through creativity, through self-reported autism traits (AQ) in conjunction with tasks measuring creativity (the Alternative Uses Task and a metaphor generation task). Chapter 5 examined attention to detail by looking at autism traits (AQ) along with the use of a visual search task and a face composite task. The overall findings of this study suggest that self-reported cultural differences in autism traits are partially reflected in cognition, particularly in the domains of attention-switching and social skills and communication. However, there are also strong indicators that the differences in self-reported autism traits between Malaysian and British members of the general population are partially the product of cultural biases embedded in the questionnaires and measures used. 2022-07-24 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69176/1/SAB_FullThesis_FinalDraft_Amended1.pdf Abu Bakar, Safira (2022) A cross-cultural study of autistic traits in the general population. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. autism autistic traits cross-cultural studies autism spectrum quotient malaysia
spellingShingle autism
autistic traits
cross-cultural studies
autism spectrum quotient
malaysia
Abu Bakar, Safira
A cross-cultural study of autistic traits in the general population
title A cross-cultural study of autistic traits in the general population
title_full A cross-cultural study of autistic traits in the general population
title_fullStr A cross-cultural study of autistic traits in the general population
title_full_unstemmed A cross-cultural study of autistic traits in the general population
title_short A cross-cultural study of autistic traits in the general population
title_sort cross-cultural study of autistic traits in the general population
topic autism
autistic traits
cross-cultural studies
autism spectrum quotient
malaysia
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69176/