Cheng Yulin, Dwyer Patrick, Keating Connor Tom
The University of Hong Kong, China.
University of California Davis, USA.
Autism. 2025 Apr;29(4):868-883. doi: 10.1177/13623613241290565. Epub 2024 Nov 2.
A growing literature suggests that there is cross-cultural variation in levels of autism-related stigma, which may partially be explained by differences in cultural orientation or autism-related knowledge between countries. This literature has relied heavily on self-report measures of explicit attitudes towards autism; little research has examined implicit biases, and whether these implicit biases vary across cultures. Thus, here we had two aims: (1) to assess the contribution of knowledge and cultural orientation to explicit stigma and implicit biases, and (2) to compare autism-related knowledge, explicit stigma, and implicit biases across university students in Hong Kong ( = 119), the United Kingdom ( = 120), and the United States ( = 122). Replicating prior work, we found that explicit stigma was predicted by less accurate knowledge, lower horizontal collectivism, greater vertical individualism, and higher implicit biases. Implicit biases were predicted by age and explicit stigma, and predicted by vertical individualism (positively) and horizontal collectivism (negatively) via explicit stigma. Knowledge and explicit stigma differed across countries, even after accounting for covariates: students in Hong Kong displayed less accurate knowledge, and higher explicit stigma towards autism, than those in the United Kingdom and United States. However, implicit biases did not differ between countries.Lay abstractAttitudes towards autism vary across countries. Some of this variation could reflect differences in cultural values across countries, or differences in how much people know about autism. Until now, most research on this topic has asked people directly about their attitudes towards interacting with autistic people. As a result, we understand little about why some people unconsciously hold negative attitudes towards autism, and whether these unconscious attitudes vary across countries. We studied explicit attitudes (willingness to interact), implicit attitudes (unconscious beliefs), knowledge about autism, and cultural values in university students from Hong Kong, the United Kingdom and the United States. We found that people were less willing to interact with autistic people if they knew less about autism, aligned with a competitive and hierarchical society ('vertical individualism'), did not see themselves as part of a collective whose members are equal (less 'horizontal collectivism'), and if they unconcsciously associated autism with negative attributes. Students in Hong Kong were less willing to interact with autistic people and had less understanding of autism compared to those in the United Kingdom and the United States. Unconscious biases did not differ across countries. Our findings highlight the need to combat misconceptions about autism to improve attitudes towards autistic people, especially in Hong Kong. Unfortunately, our results suggest that acquiring more accurate knowledge may not be sufficient to alter unconscious biases. Further research is needed to determine the factors underlying unconscious biases.
越来越多的文献表明,与自闭症相关的污名化程度存在跨文化差异,这可能部分归因于不同国家在文化取向或自闭症相关知识方面的差异。这些文献严重依赖于对自闭症明确态度的自我报告测量;很少有研究考察内隐偏见,以及这些内隐偏见是否因文化而异。因此,我们有两个目标:(1)评估知识和文化取向对明确污名和内隐偏见的影响,(2)比较香港(n = 119)、英国(n = 120)和美国(n = 122)大学生在自闭症相关知识、明确污名和内隐偏见方面的差异。重复之前的研究,我们发现,知识准确性较低、水平集体主义程度较低、垂直个人主义程度较高以及内隐偏见较高会预测明确污名。年龄和明确污名会预测内隐偏见,垂直个人主义(正向)和水平集体主义(负向)会通过明确污名预测内隐偏见。即使在考虑协变量之后,不同国家之间的知识和明确污名仍存在差异:与英国和美国的学生相比,香港的学生对自闭症的知识准确性较低,且对自闭症的明确污名较高。然而,不同国家之间的内隐偏见没有差异。
对自闭症的态度因国家而异。这种差异部分可能反映了不同国家文化价值观的差异,或者人们对自闭症了解程度的差异。到目前为止,关于这个主题的大多数研究都是直接询问人们对与自闭症患者互动的态度。因此,我们对为什么有些人会无意识地对自闭症持有负面态度,以及这些无意识态度是否因国家而异了解甚少。我们研究了香港、英国和美国大学生的明确态度(互动意愿)、内隐态度(无意识信念)、自闭症知识和文化价值观。我们发现,如果人们对自闭症了解较少、认同竞争激烈和等级分明的社会(“垂直个人主义”)、不认为自己是成员平等的集体的一部分(较少“水平集体主义”),以及无意识地将自闭症与负面属性联系起来,那么他们就不太愿意与自闭症患者互动。与英国和美国的学生相比,香港的学生不太愿意与自闭症患者互动,对自闭症的了解也较少。不同国家之间的无意识偏见没有差异。我们的研究结果凸显了消除对自闭症误解以改善对自闭症患者态度的必要性,尤其是在香港。不幸的是,我们的结果表明,获取更准确的知识可能不足以改变无意识偏见。需要进一步研究以确定无意识偏见背后的因素。