@adrian@autism101@actuallyautistic How do you know for sure that it is AI generated? That's an awfully bold statement to make with little evidence. It's a leap to a conclusion.
@housepanther@actuallyautistic@autism101@adrian Zooming in on hands, eyes, and finer details is usually a dead giveaway. They usually clip/morph, look really weird, have to many appendages, etc...
@autism101@actuallyautistic I never had words for it, but always hated going out to places with loud music/ ambient noise. It made me so tired and after tired came aggressive.
I just invented something for those really sensitive to smells. I’m going to call it “The Nose Canceller”! I’m going to patent it, sell it, and retire. 😅
It is estimated that approximately 70-95% of autistic people experience sensory processing challenges. For me personally, I was always hypersensitive to stuff, but others are hyposensitive and seek out sensory input. And of course many are a combination of both.
@autism101@actuallyautistic
As a side question, does anyone share the experience that hearing young female and child voices appear in our brain like a bright hot glowing sensation that you cant "push away", hearing their words disturbing your own thoughts?
@crazy_pony@autism101@actuallyautistic Yes, definitely. Some high-pitched female voices even push it to the extreme. Leads to socially awkward moments too.
@tipiak75@autism101@actuallyautistic
Still tring to explain it to NTs that "noise cancelling headphones" cant solve this problem because its not exactly the noise that drains me
I was never specially sensitive to <Sounds> but always to a mix of voices talking around and the experience how they "hammer" into my brain, going beyond my information processing bandwidth
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