Bullying and Identity Development: Insights from Autistic and Non-autistic College Students

Adult Male Adolescent Social Identification Universities 4. Education 05 social sciences Bullying Young Adult Humans Female 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Autistic Disorder Empathy Students 10. No inequality Problem Solving
DOI: 10.1007/s10803-017-3383-y Publication Date: 2017-12-14T08:58:25Z
ABSTRACT
Reduced cognitive empathy may put autistic people at risk for bullying. We compared interpretations of bullying provided by 22 autistic and 15 non-autistic college students. Autistic (and non-autistic) students reported less severe bullying in college relative to earlier in development. Chronic bullying was associated with improvements in self-descriptions and self-acceptance. Autistic students who were chronically bullied were more likely to self-identify as autistic when asked to explain their disability. Autistic and non-autistic students demonstrated similar levels of cognitive empathy, providing no evidence that a "double empathy problem" contributes to bullying for all autistic individuals. Findings suggest that recovery from bullying can contribute to resilience and that autistic people gain insights about bullying and how to overcome it with development.
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