Is the verbal section of the SATs biased against aspies?

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what the subject says
yes 40%  40%  [ 4 ]
no 30%  30%  [ 3 ]
don't know 30%  30%  [ 3 ]
Total votes : 10

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Deinonychus
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13 Jan 2008, 10:06 pm

I thought of this question based on a comment made by Sophist in this topic http://www.wrongplanet.net/postt53682.html.

Sophist wrote:
Ah, here it is, fulltext:
http://brain.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/con ... 129/9/2484

And the abstract:
Quote:
Comprehending high-imagery sentences like The number eight when rotated 90 degrees looks like a pair of eyeglasses involves the participation and integration of several cortical regions. The linguistic content must be processed to determine what is to be mentally imaged, and then the mental image must be evaluated and related to the sentence. A theory of cortical underconnectivity in autism predicts that the interregional collaboration required between linguistic and imaginal processing in this task would be underserved in autism. This functional MRI study examined brain activation in 12 participants with autism and 13 age- and IQ-matched control participants while they processed sentences with either high- or low-imagery content. The analysis of functional connectivity among cortical regions showed that the language and spatial centres in the participants with autism were not as well synchronized as in controls. In addition to the functional connectivity differences, there was also a group difference in activation. In the processing of low-imagery sentences (e.g. Addition, subtraction and multiplication are all math skills[), the use of imagery is not essential to comprehension. Nevertheless, the autism group activated parietal and occipital brain regions associated with imagery for comprehending both the low and high-imagery sentences, suggesting that they were using mental imagery in both conditions. In contrast, the control group showed imagery-related activation primarily in the high-imagery condition. The findings provide further evidence of underintegration of language and imagery in autism (and hence expand the understanding of underconnectivity) but also show that people with autism are more reliant on visualization to support language comprehension.



Sophist
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13 Jan 2008, 10:25 pm

I definitely think we should be given extended time!

I'm going to be trying to get it for my GRE's though it's going to be an absolute pain in the arse trying to get it. :? Every diagnosis you need accommodations for, needs to be up to date within the six months prior to testing. Which can be very difficult to get all your diagnoses "renewed" without paying $$$ all over again. :roll:


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Sedaka
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13 Jan 2008, 10:34 pm

did well on everything in GREs except the math section :( terrible in fact. lol


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Strapples
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13 Jan 2008, 11:32 pm

i think the entire SAT and any other so called "standardized" test is biased against autistics


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9CatMom
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14 Jan 2008, 9:01 pm

The verbal section was my strength. I scored in the 98th percentile. Math was much harder.



pakled
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14 Jan 2008, 9:37 pm

if it was, I wouldn't have made 630...;)

The GRE's, on the other hand, waxed my @#%...;) I'm intuitive (usually wrongly), rather than analytical...;)



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14 Jan 2008, 9:52 pm

Well, I did quite well in verbal, but I think that the test itself is written to throw people (NT or not) off rather than to test their knowledge. I found that the ACT was much, much better.


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