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I want to share a framework I came up with to help me understand my own experience as an autistic person. I call it Weak Signal Theory.
Weak Signal Theory states that a core difference between autistic and non-autistic people is how we interpret weak signals. In this framework, autistic people have an automatic bias towards interpreting weak signals as unimportant noise, while non-autistic people have an automatic bias towards interpreting weak signals as nuance.
What is a weak signal? A weak signal is a subtle cue or detail. A weak signal can be noise or nuance. If it's noise, that means the signal is NOT conveying relevant information. If it's nuance, that means the signal is conveying relevant information.
In my comic, Person A asks "How are you?" and Person B responds "I am fine". Person B has an ambiguous facial expression. This is one example of a weak signal. Other weak signals in a social situation might be subtleties in tone of voice or hesitation before answering the question.
In the universe where Person A is autistic, Person A automatically focuses on the strongest and most literal signal, which is the content of what Person B is saying. The autistic person believes their friend is fine and their brain dismisses body languages and other subtleties as unimportant noise.
In the universe where Person A is NOT autistic, Person A automatically picks up on subtle cues like facial expression, tone of voice, and maybe a sense of hesitation before Person B says "I am fine". The non-autistic brain is able to quickly and automatically pick that up as nuance and concludes that their friend is not as "fine" as they seem.
Further discussion and disclaimers under the cut.
I built my own little artifact-heavy midi harmonizer

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13/03/2024
Here we go again, another day looking at EEG data and pretending I actually know what I’m doing 🙃
I have a meeting at 11 a.m so, obviously I stopped being able to focus on anything at 10 a.m
At least I have yet to feel like I suck at everything this week, although it’s only Wednesday, I have time!
Got a cheap bluetooth dongle so I can get bluetooth audio on my PC.
(Yes I know I recommend everyone have a wireless card in their desktop purely for this eventuality. I have a motherboard that can accept a wireless M.2 card. I just didn't use it. I have plans.)
Anyway. I finally have a good driver stack and hardware to try SBC-XQ. Didn't want to work on my laptop for some reason. I think that SBC-XQ is the funniest bluetooth codec. Sony and Qualcomm put quite a lot of proprietary effort (and patents) behind LDAC and Apt-X HD respectively but Shannon is the deadliest son of a bitch in the world of information transmission so it turns out just juicing the bitrate on SBC to 512kbps comes out more or less perceptually identical to Apt-X HD at 512kbps. SBC-XQ requires absolutely zero other changes and is often completely backwards compatible.
Subjective and objective measurements of SBC at high bitrates.. SoundExpert news and articles
LDAC/LHDC pushes more detail but at its highest bitrate it needs a stupendous ~1000kbps and is, once again, basically indistinguishable from SBC-XQ in all but the most perfect listening environments.
Truly the 320kbps Opus of Bluetooth codecs.