"We don't just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary." — James D. Nicoll
The question about enjoying mimicking animal noises really made me examine myself. I spent a not-insignificant amount of time wondering what the enjoyment or lack thereof indicates about a person.
Your Aspie score: 102 of 200 Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 128 of 200 You seem to have both Aspie and neurotypical traits
I'm "neurotypical" for social, communication, hunting, and perception, but lean Aspie heavily for talent and compulsive, which is sort of skewing my graph in an interesting way. It's all oblong-ish.
The questions either went "omg yes that's totally me" or "eh I guess a little" or "wtf do people actually do that?" So I didn't really suffer for the lack of choices as I thought I would.
http://www.rdos.net/eng/poly12c.php?p1=59&p2=27&p3=32&p4=23&p5=35&p6=9&p7=44&p8=44&p9=43&p10=8&p11=12&p12=24 Your Aspie score: 70 of 200 Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 157 of 200
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Your Aspie score: 93 of 200 Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 114 of 200 You seem to have both Aspie and neurotypical traits
Spoonless wrote:
The question about enjoying mimicking animal noises really made me examine myself. I spent a not-insignificant amount of time wondering what the enjoyment or lack thereof indicates about a person.
Quote:
Aspie hunting This group contains passive hunting traits. One part of the traits is related to preferred habitats (e.g. slowly flowing water; caves; woods; liking mist or fog). Another part seems to be close-contact hunting traits (e.g. jumping over things; climbing; chasing animals; biting; enjoying spinning in circles; strong grip; strong hands; physical endurance; enjoying rodeo riders). Some other traits are related to sneaking (e.g. sneaking through the woods; sneaking up on animals; walking on toes) and general hunting tactics (e.g. mimicking animal sounds; digging; throwing small things; building traps; fascination for fire; sniffing)
Not sure if that clears that up for you. Doesn't really mean anything to me.
Your Aspie score: 93 of 200 Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 114 of 200 You seem to have both Aspie and neurotypical traits
Spoonless wrote:
The question about enjoying mimicking animal noises really made me examine myself. I spent a not-insignificant amount of time wondering what the enjoyment or lack thereof indicates about a person.
Quote:
Aspie hunting This group contains passive hunting traits. One part of the traits is related to preferred habitats (e.g. slowly flowing water; caves; woods; liking mist or fog). Another part seems to be close-contact hunting traits (e.g. jumping over things; climbing; chasing animals; biting; enjoying spinning in circles; strong grip; strong hands; physical endurance; enjoying rodeo riders). Some other traits are related to sneaking (e.g. sneaking through the woods; sneaking up on animals; walking on toes) and general hunting tactics (e.g. mimicking animal sounds; digging; throwing small things; building traps; fascination for fire; sniffing)
Not sure if that clears that up for you. Doesn't really mean anything to me.
Edited, Nov 5th 2012 12:49am by Poldaran
Well the question was there, and I thought, "I don't remember the last time I mimicked animal noises (intentionally)" and so I started to, in order to see if I enjoyed it so I could accurately answer the question. Some of them can be pretty fun.
Your Aspie score: 45 of 200 Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 170 of 200 You are very likely neurotypical
I guess I'm more neurotypical than I thought. I was quite fascinated by the animal noise one because I'm almost positive that the internet and cat pictures are to blame for mimicking cat meows.