Zonder wrote:
Scientist wrote:
Zonder wrote:
Scientist wrote:
Quote:
'This questionnairre is designed to measure the mild autistic traits present in people who are not actually autistic but have a genetic predisposition to autism.'
:roll: ...then it makes no sense for us to take this test. It's for NTs.
Must be why everyone seems to be getting fairly high scores.

There's been quite a bit of research concerning the parents and siblings of those with autism, and this test was developed to try to measure the personality and developmental factors in parents that can contribute to a diagnosable autism spectrum disorder in children. Evidently, they've found that if both parents score high on the Broader Autism Phenotype Test, the higher the likelihood of a child being diagnosed with ASD.
As someone who is not diagnosed, it is interesting to see the scores . . .
Z
But then you'd have to be interested in YOUR PARENTS' SCORES on this test, to 'predict' you having ASD.
"Predict" might have been too strong of a word for me to use - "be contributing factors" might be more correct.
I would be interested in my parent's scores, except my father (who I'd say had some ASD issues) is gone. It would also be interesting to consider my scores if I thought of having children . . .
I meant that the Broad Autism Phenotype Questionnaire (BAPQ, this test) is a test designed to try to predict for an undiagnosed or even unborn child whether or not he / she has or will have ASD, by measuring Broad Autism Phenotype of both NT parents. It is not a test designed for measuring for undiagnosed possible ASDs taking this test whether or not he / she probably has ASD (or how severe). If anyone wants to know whether he / she has ASD (or which ASD or how severe), they should go for professional evaluation by a licensed psychologist or a psychiatrist; tests to get an indication, are Baron-Cohen (et al.)'s AQ test (
Publication) and Wheelwright (et al.)'s EQ SQ-R tests (
Publication) (you can take the AQ test and the EQ SQ-R test set in
this WP forum ASD related scientific tests topic).
And did you see my quotation marks? They were meant to indicate that the BAPQ (or any psychological test) cannot 100% predict anything, without misses and false hits, and the quotation marks were also there because in your case it wouldn't be forecasting for the future, if you had your parents (if they'd both have been still alive) take this test to see if you have ASD.
And if you're thinking of having children and you might have ASD undiagnosed and you want to know if your children will have ASD, you should go for professional evaluation whether or not you have ASD, and in case you have ASD, chances are higher that your child will also have ASD, and chances also depend on whether or not your child's other parent has ASD (diagnosed or undiagnosed).
Zonder wrote:
Joseph Piven, an autism spectrum researcher and professor at the University of North Caroline at Chapel Hill, discusses research into the Broad Autism Phenotype
hereThe BAPQ publication is more informative:
Hurley, R.S.E., Losh, M., Parlier, M., Reznick, J.S., & Piven, J. (2007). The Broad Autism Phenotype Questionnaire. Journal of Developmental Disorders, 37, 1679-1690
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1975, ASD: Asperger's Syndrome (diagnosed: October 22, 2009)
Interests: science, experimental psychology, psychophysics, music (listening and playing (guitar)) and visual arts
Don't focus on your weaknesses, focus on your strengths
Last edited by Scientist on 07 Dec 2009, 8:04 pm, edited 2 times in total.