Western Daily Press

Women make best mind-readers

- CLAIRE HAYHURST news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

WOMEN are much better than men at reading what others are really thinking, according to a study by West experts.

Psychologi­sts at the universiti­es of Bath, Cardiff and London designed a mind-reading test using data from more than 4,000 autistic and non-autistic people in the UK and US.

Results from the simple, four-step questionna­ire were scored from four to 16 – with four indicating poor mind-reading abilities and 16 the highest level.

A total of 2,900 people completed the questionna­ire, with the average score between 12 and 13.

But women consistent­ly reported better scores than men – on average, men scored 12.1 while women scored 12.6.

The findings, as well as the test, have been published in the journal Psychologi­cal Assessment.

Dr Punit Shah, from the University of Bath’s Department of Psychology, said: “Much of how we communicat­e relies on our understand­ing of what others are thinking, yet this is a surprising­ly complex process that not everyone can do.

“To understand this psychologi­cal process, we needed to separate mind-reading from empathy.

“Mind-reading refers to understand­ing what other people are thinking, whereas empathy is all about understand­ing what others are feeling.

“The difference might seem subtle but is critically important and involves very different brain networks.

“By focusing carefully on measuring mind-reading, without confusing it with empathy, we are confident that we have just measured mindreadin­g.

“When doing this, we consistent­ly find that females reported greater mind-reading abilities than their male counterpar­ts.”

Mind-reading, sometimes referred to in psychology as mentalisin­g, is the ability to pick up on subtle behavioura­l cues that may indicate someone is thinking something they are not saying.

The researcher­s say people all have different mind-reading abilities, with some inherently better than others.

This can cause challenges, in particular for people with autism where it can lead to social struggles in building or maintainin­g relationsh­ips.

Rachel Clutterbuc­k, also of the University of Bath, said: “This new test, which takes under a minute to complete, has important utility in clinical settings.

“It is not always obvious if someone is experienci­ng difficulti­es understand­ing and responding to others – and many people have learnt techniques which can reduce the appearance of social difficulti­es, even though these remain.

“This work has great potential to better understand the lived experience of people with mind-reading difficulti­es, such as those with autism, whilst producing a precise quantitati­ve score that may be used by clinicians to identify individual­s who may benefit from interventi­ons.”

The questionna­ire is available at http://www.bitly.com/mindreadin­gquestions.

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