Socially interested, or socially sophisticated? On mutual social influence in autism

Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42 (2019)
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Abstract

A lower tendency to influence and be influenced by their social environment seems almost self-evident in autism. However, a closer look at differences and similarities between autistic and non-autistic individuals suggests that some basic mechanisms involved in social influence might be intact in autism, whereas atypical responses point to differences in more sophisticated recursive social strategies, such as reputation management.

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