Abstract

Autistic people call for greater acceptance even though the general public has greater awareness of the autism spectrum. This study investigated explicit or conscious attitudes toward the autism spectrum and disability in college students and the general population. We hypothesized that both samples would associate "a person on the autism spectrum" with more negative attributes than other types of people except for "a person with a disability." In Phase 1, participants generated 10 word associations for 8 labels: a person on the autism spectrum, a person not on the autism spectrum, a person with a disability, a person without a disability, a college student, a professor, a child, and a parent. In Phase 2, participants rated the 10 most common words for each label (type of person) in Phase 1 on a 7-point Likert scale from extremely negative to extremely positive. Ninety-nine undergraduate students and 106 adults recruited through Amazon Mechanical Turk completed Phase 1. One hundred twenty-two undergraduate students and 101 adults recruited through Amazon Mechanical Turk completed Phase 2. Only "a person with a disability" in the general population sample was rated as having significant negative associations. However, the associations of "a person with a disability" were rated more negatively than all other labels in both samples, and the associations of "a person on the autism spectrum" were rated as second most negative in the general population sample. Explicit associations toward disability and autism were somewhat mixed. Adults in the general population tended to have more negative explicit associations with disability, and to a lesser extent autism. These results underscore the need to examine attitudes in samples more representative of the general population. Furthermore, evidence of possible explicit negative associations is concerning and highlights the imperative need to confront ableism. Why was this study done?: The general public claims to be aware of the autism spectrum and recent research suggests that they have greater knowledge about the autism spectrum than they did in the past. However, as autistic individuals have articulated, autism awareness is not the same as autism acceptance. In order for autistic individuals to be fully included into society, we must move to autism acceptance. One way researchers examine potential discrimination is by studying attitudes.What was the purpose of this study?: This study examines people's explicit attitudes toward the autism spectrum and to disability. Explicit attitudes are attitudes that are conscious and controllable.What did the researchers do?: Two groups of adults participated in the study: a group of college students and a noncollege sample of adults designed to better represent the general population of adults. Participants completed an online study wherein they were asked to list word associations for different types of people including "a person on the autism spectrum" and "a person with a disability." In a second study, participants then rated the most common associations from extremely negative to extremely positive.What were the results of the study?: The results were somewhat mixed. Only the set of associations of "a person with a disability" were rated by participants in the noncollege group as negative. However, the associations of "a person with a disability" were rated more negatively than all other types of people in both groups, and the associations of "a person on the autism spectrum" were rated as second most negative in the noncollege sample.What do these findings add to what was already known?: The majority of research on explicit attitudes toward autism has focused on children, including how interventions may improve attitudes toward autistic children. Therefore, this research provides much needed information on the state of attitudes toward autistic individuals more generally. This research also provides a comparison of attitudes toward autism, disability, and other groups. Furthermore, research assessing attitudes toward autism in adults has largely focused on college students, whereas this research considered both college students and a noncollege sample.What are the potential weaknesses in the study?: These findings may not extend to a more diverse population as both groups had relatively high education levels, were primarily White non-Hispanic and were living in the United States. Furthermore, participants may have generated more positive associations for "a person on the autism spectrum" and "a person with a disability" because they wanted to be viewed in a favorable light. This is known as a social desirability bias.How will these findings help autistic adults now or in the future?: Unfortunately, possible explicit negative associations with the autism spectrum and with disability are concerning as they reflect people's conscious and controllable attitudes. These results highlight a need for action and also support autistic individuals' demand for actions toward autism acceptance.

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