The pattern seekers : how autism drives human invention / Simon Baron-Cohen
Material type: TextEdition: First editionDescription: xi, 252 pages : illustrations ; 25 cmISBN: 9781541647145; 1541647149Subject(s): Autistic people | Autism | Pattern perception | Creative ability | Inventors | Inventions | Autistic Disorder | Pattern Recognition, Visual | Creativity | Inventors | InventionsGenre/Form: Instructional and educational works. | Instructional and educational works. DDC classification: 616.85/882 | 152.1423 LOC classification: RC553.A88 | B3684 2020NLM classification: WM 203.5Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Martha's Vineyard High School Library | 616.85/BAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Checked out | 04/25/2023 | 39844500066067 |
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616.833/LAN Parkinson's disease / | 616.834/AAS Multiple sclerosis / | 616.849/KIT Headaches / | 616.85/BAR The pattern seekers : how autism drives human invention / | 616.85/BOY The anxiety toolkit : strategies for fine-tuning your mind and moving past your stuck points / | 616.85/DON In a different key : | 616.85/FORD What you must think of me : a firsthand account of one teenager's experience with social anxiety disorder / |
"A 70,000-year history"--Book jacket
Includes bibliographical references (pages 187-231) and index
Born pattern seekers -- The systemizing mechanism -- Five types of brains -- The mind of an inventor -- A revolution in the brain -- System-blindness: why monkeys don't skateboard -- The battle of the giants -- Sex in the valley -- Nurturing the inventors of the future -- Appendix 1: Take the SQ and the EQ to find out your brain type -- Appendix 2: Take the AQ to find out how many autistic traits you have
Simon Baron-Cohen reveals the surprising answer to two apparently distinct questions: Why are humans so inventive? And why does autism exist? The first question hangs over almost every human endeavor: business people want to know how to innovate. Cognitive psychologists want to understand the nature of creativity. Evolutionary scientists and comparative psychologists want to understand why we are capable of such cultural complexity and diversity, when other animals, at best, have learned how to use a rock as a simple tool. At the same time, the study of autism has become a preeminent concern among overlapping groups, from educators to scientists to business people and parents -- and of course to people with autism themselves. Baron-Cohen argues these two questions are actually the same: understanding autism -- specifically the fixation on patterns that is considered characteristic of the condition -- is the key to understanding both the ancient origins and the modern flowering of human creativity
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