Asperger's overconfidence

" Our PDD-NOS clients have trouble doing the socially correct thing when their focus is pulled elsewhere. Unlike a person with Asperger's or autism, these individuals are very contex-dependent; unlike the others on the spectrum, when questioned about social behaviour, they can correctly answer what is expected as long as their focus is not pulled to some other need or interest. Knowing the right answers does not guarantee the correct behvaiour when the situation arises, however.

Those with Asperger's respond very differently to the same social questions. Although they don't know the correct answers, they tend to be overly confident about their interpretations, even self-righteous. And they don't accept others' interpretations even when they would obviously benefit by doing so. On the other hand, intelligent individuals with autism or Asperger's can sometimes train themselves in social behaviour to an extent that they can get by, although awkwardly, in the world of "normals." They like to follow rules, and can train themselves in the mastery of social rules, and find comfort in using them. "

- "Adults on the Autism Spectrum: Leave the Nest, Achieving Supported Independence" by Nancy Perry

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