A multidisciplinary team from the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU) suggests that delving deeper into the barely studied phenomenon of camouflaging can improve autism research
Agustín Vicente, Valentina Petrolini and Ekaine Rodríguez, researchers of the University of the Basque Country’s Lindy Lab-Language in Neurodiversity group. CREDIT Nuria González. UPV/EHU.
Recently, there has been much talk about camouflaging in autism. However, research into camouflaging is still relatively very recent, its nature has been barely studied, and there are a lot of open questions. This work, therefore, aims to present an integrative view of camouflaging. It can be characterised as the set of strategies adopted by the autistic population to fit into the social world. “We aim to understand this phenomenon better and to analyse in depth how camouflaging develops so that some suggestions can be put forward on how to step up research into it,” said Valentina Petrolini, a researcher in the UPV/EHU’s Lindy Lab group and one of the authors of the study.
People normally camouflage themselves with two aims: hide their diagnosis and fit in socially. “We would say that people camouflage themselves when they rehearse conversations they are going to have, when they imitate other people’s gestures and expressions and, in general, when they make an effort to hide their autistic traits,” explained Valentina Petrolini. “Many studies link the attempt by these individuals to pass themselves off as who they are not with high levels of anxiety and long-term mental problems,” added the UPV/EHU researcher.
How is camouflaging detected in the autistic population? Tools, such as tests and questionnaires, currently exist. Still, they overlook many people in the spectrum, such as people who unconsciously camouflage themselves, people with intellectual and/or linguistic disabilities, etc. In this work, “we are proposing that information be triangulated by using existing evidence, gathering information from the environment, observing a person’s behaviour in different contexts and talking to people in different contexts… in other words, by observing the phenomenon of camouflaging without directly asking the person involved,” said Valentina Petrolini.
Extending the study of camouflaging to currently overlooked groups also has significant implications in terms of impact. This study extends the discussion on camouflaging to currently little-studied groups on the autism spectrum, i.e. children and adults with linguistic and/or intellectual disabilities. “We argue that camouflaging in these groups may differ from what the current literature describes as typical cases of camouflaging,” said Valentina Petrolini. “One of the points that emerge from our study,” Petrolini went on, “is that camouflaging may emerge differently, and exert a different impact, depending on the people who do it”.
This purely theoretical work concludes that “the basis of much of the research conducted so far is limited to the characterisation and representativeness of the participants, suggesting that the findings cannot be applied to the autistic community as a whole” Valentina Petrolini. The work also highlights the need to explore the phenomenon of autism in greater depth and to develop measuring tools that are more accurate and inclusive than the current ones. “We could even go as far as to say that it is a call to action so that generalized conclusions are not drawn without having an accurate picture of the situation,” said the UPV/EHU’s Lindy Lab research group.