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OT: Take the AQ Test from Wired

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These two Wired article will be in the Files section. I will add the

direct link on Dec 11. .

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Take the AQ Test

For each question, choose one, scoring at the end:

Definitely agree

Slightly agree

Slightly disagree

Definitely disagree

1. I prefer to do things with others rather than on my own.

2. I prefer to do things the same way over and over again.

3. If I try to imagine something, I find it very easy to create a

picture in my mind.

4. I frequently get so strongly absorbed in one thing that I lose

sight of other things.

5. I often notice small sounds when others do not.

6. I usually notice car number plates or similar strings of

information.

7. Other people frequently tell me that what I've said is impolite,

even though I think it is polite.

8. When I'm reading a story, I can easily imagine what the characters

might look like.

9. I am fascinated by dates.

10. In a social group, I can easily keep track of several different

people's conversations.

11. I find social situations easy.

12. I tend to notice details that others do not.

13. I would rather go to a library than to a party.

14. I find making up stories easy.

15. I find myself drawn more strongly to people than to things.

16. I tend to have very strong interests, which I get upset about if

I can't pursue.

17. I enjoy social chitchat.

18. When I talk, it isn't always easy for others to get a word in

edgewise.

19. I am fascinated by numbers.

20. When I'm reading a story, I find it difficult to work out the

characters' intentions.

21. I don't particularly enjoy reading dictions.

22. I find it hard to make new friends.

23. I notice patterns in things all the time.

24. I would rather go to the theater than to a museum.

25. It does not upset me if my daily routine is disturbed.

26. If frequently find that I don't' know how to keep a conversation

going.

27. if find it easy to " read between the lines' when someone is

talking to me.

28. I usually concentrate more on the whole picture, rather than on

the small details.

29. I am not very good at remembering phone numbers.

30. I don't usually notice small changes in a situation or a person's

appearance.

31. I know how to tell if someone listening to me is getting bored.

32. I find it easy to do more than one thing at once.

33. When I talk on the phone, I'm not sure when it's my turn to speak.

34. I enjoy doing things spontaneously.

35. I am often the last to understand the point of a joke.

36. I find it easy to work out what someone is thinking or feeling

just by looking at their face.

37. If there is an interruption, I can switch back to what I was

doing very quickly.

38. I am good at social chitchat.

39. People often tell me that I keep going on and on about the same

thing.

40. When I was young, I used to enjoy playing games involving

pretending with other children.

41. I like to collect information about categories of things (such as

types of cars, birds, trains, plants).

42. I find it difficult to imagine what it would be like to be

someone else.

43. I like to carefully plan any activities I participate in.

44. I enjoy social occasions.

45. I find if difficult to work out people's intentions.

46. New situations make me anxious.

47. I enjoy meeting new peoples.

48. I am a good diplomat

49. I am not very good at remembering people's date of birth.

50. I find it very easy to play games with children that involve

pretending.

How to score: " Definitely agree " or " Slightly agree " responses to

questions

1,2,4,5,6,7,9,12,13,16,18,19,20,21,22,23,26,33,35,39,41,42,43,45,46

score 1 point. " Definitely disagree " or " Slightly disagree " responses

to questions

3,8,10,11,14,15,17,24,25,27,28,29,30,31,32,34,36,37,38,40,44,47,48,49,

50 score 1 point.

Psychologist Simon Baron-Cohen and his colleagues at Cambridge's

Autism Research Centre have created the Autism-Spectrum Quotient, or

AQ, as a measure of the extent of autistic traits in adults. In the

first major trial using the test, the average score in the control

groups was 16.4 Eighty percent of those diagnosed with autism or a

related disorder scored 32 or higher. The test is not a means for

making a diagnosis, however, and many who sore above 32 and even meet

the diagnostic criteria for mild autism or Asperger's' report no

difficulty functioning in their everyday lives.

Copyright MRC-SBC/SJW February 1998, Published: Journal of Autism and

Developmental Disorders, 31, 5-17 92001).

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