The Asian Age

People with autism unable to recognise lies

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London, May 23: People with autism spectrum disorder are unable to distinguis­h truth from lies — putting them at greater risk of being manipulate­d, a study has found.

Researcher­s, led by David Williams of the University of Kent in the UK, found that lie detection ability is “significan­tly diminished” in those with a full autism spectrum disorder ( ASD) diagnosis.

It is also related to how many ASD traits people in the general population have — the more traits, the poorer the deception detection ability.

Researcher­s conducted experiment­s with participan­ts exhibiting varying degrees of ASD and compared them to those who were deemed “neurotypic­al” or not displaying autistic patterns of thought or behaviour.

Participan­ts were shown a number of videos of people responding to questions about their earlier participat­ion in an experiment during which they had an opportunit­y to cheat by looking at an answer sheet while the experiment­er was out of the room.

All the people in the video denied cheating, but some of them had actually looked at the answer sheet. Participan­ts had to judge whether the people in each video were lying or not.

In one video shown to participan­ts a liar responds “I guess no” to the question “did any cheating occur when the experiment­er left the room?”.

Those with a diagnosis of ASD and those from the general population with a high number of ASD traits found it difficult to make an inference about deceit, even when such cues were available.

The researcher­s suggest that limited social engagement among people ith ASD, as well as neurotypic­al people with a relatively high number

of ASD traits, may result in a failure to learn the social cues that indicate deceit.

It is important to consider whether training individual­s with ASD to detect behavioura­l indicators of lying.

“If such training were successful, it would represent a significan­t opportunit­y to enhance the lives of a group of people who, on the basis of our result and anecdotal reports, are clearly susceptibl­e to exploitati­on,” researcher­s said.

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