Weak central coherence theory
https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Weak_cen...herence_theory
Start your timers and find Waldo!
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If you are very quick then you might have [at least subset of] weak central coherence. Many autistic people are amazingly quick with this task.
http://theconversation.com/study-of-...he-brain-25224
The finding that there are significant differences in brain activity in response to motion but not patterns suggests that the autistic brain processes more complex information, such as motion, differently. In contrast we found that the responses to simple patterns were similar in people with autism and without.
This could mean that the advantages seen in individuals on the autism spectrum in static visual search may be the result of higher processes in a different part of the brain.
There is universal help for it:
I really suck at this.
One more test:
Is it rotating or are there two sheets sliding?
Sliding Sheets: weaker central coherence (details)
Rotating whole: stronger central coherence
I see rotating whole.