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Home » The World Needs All Kinds of Minds: Temple Grandin (Transcript)

The World Needs All Kinds of Minds: Temple Grandin (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Temple Grandin’s talk titled “The World Needs All Kinds of Minds” at TED conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Understanding Autism

I think I’ll start out and just talk a little bit about what exactly autism is. Autism is a very big continuum that goes from very severe — the child remains nonverbal — all the way up to brilliant scientists and engineers. And I actually feel at home here, because there’s a lot of autism genetics here. You wouldn’t have any — it’s a continuum of traits.

When does a nerd turn into Asperger, which is just mild autism? I mean, Einstein, Mozart, and Tesla would all be probably diagnosed as autistic spectrum today. And one of the things that is really going to concern me is getting these kids to be the ones that are going to invent the next energy things that Bill Gates talked about this morning. OK, now, if you want to understand autism: animals.

I want to talk to you now about different ways of thinking. You have to get away from verbal language. I think in pictures. I don’t think in language. Now, the thing about the autistic mind is it attends to details. This is a test where you either have to pick out the big letters or the little letters, and the autistic mind picks out the little letters more quickly.

The Importance of Hands-On Learning

And the thing is, the normal brain ignores the details. Well, if you’re building a bridge, details are pretty important because it’ll fall down if you ignore the details. And one of my big concerns with a lot of policy things today is things are getting too abstract. People are getting away from doing hands-on stuff.

I’m really concerned that a lot of the schools have taken out the hands-on classes, because art, and classes like that — those are the classes where I excelled. In my work with cattle, I noticed a lot of little things that most people don’t notice would make the cattle balk. For example, this flag waving right in front of the veterinary facility. This feed yard was going to tear down their whole veterinary facility; all they needed to do was move the flag.

Insights from Animal Behavior

Rapid movement, contrast. In the early ’70s when I started, I got right down in the chutes to see what cattle were seeing. People thought that was crazy. A coat on a fence would make them balk, shadows would make them balk, a hose on the floor — people weren’t noticing these things.

A chain hanging down … And that’s shown very, very nicely in the movie. In fact, I loved the movie, how they duplicated all my projects. That’s the geek side. My drawings got to star in the movie, too. And, actually, it’s called “Temple Grandin,” not “Thinking in Pictures.”

The Nature of Thinking in Pictures

So what is thinking in pictures? It’s literally movies in your head. My mind works like Google for images. Now when I was a young kid, I didn’t know my thinking was different. I thought everybody thought in pictures. Then when I did my book, “Thinking in Pictures,” I started interviewing people about how they think.

And I was shocked to find out that my thinking was quite different. Like if I say, “Think about a church steeple,” most people get this sort of generalized generic one. Now, maybe that’s not true in this room, but it’s going to be true in a lot of different places. I see only specific pictures. They flash up into my memory, just like Google for pictures. And in the movie, they’ve got a great scene in there, where the word “shoe” is said, and a whole bunch of ’50s and ’60s shoes pop into my imagination. OK, there’s my childhood church; that’s specific. There’s some more, Fort Collins.

Leveraging Visual Thinking in Design

OK, how about famous ones? And they just kind of come up, kind of like this. Just really quickly, like Google for pictures. And they come up one at a time, and then I think, “OK, well, maybe we can have it snow, or we can have a thunderstorm,” and I can hold it there and turn them into videos.

Now, visual thinking was a tremendous asset in my work designing cattle-handling facilities. And I’ve worked really hard on improving how cattle are treated at the slaughter plant. I’m not going to go into any gucky slaughter slides. I’ve got that stuff up on YouTube, if you want to look at it. But one of the things that I was able to do in my design work is I could actually test-run a piece of equipment in my mind, just like a virtual reality computer system.

And this is an aerial view of a recreation of one of my projects that was used in the movie. That was like just so super cool. And there were a lot of, kind of, Asperger types and autism types working out there on the movie set, too. But one of the things that really worries me is: Where’s the younger version of those kids going today? They’re not ending up in Silicon Valley, where they belong.

Selling Work, Not Self

One of the things I learned very early on because I wasn’t that social, is I had to sell my work, and not myself. And the way I sold livestock jobs is I showed off my drawings, I showed off pictures of things. Another thing that helped me as a little kid is, boy, in the ’50s, you were taught manners. You were taught you can’t pull the merchandise off the shelves in the store and throw it around.

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When kids get to be in third or fourth grade, you might see that this kid’s going to be a visual thinker, drawing in perspective. Now, I want to emphasize that not every autistic kid is going to be a visual thinker.