- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
235 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
235 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4229
|
|
Title: HPR4229: Neurodiversity and Hacking
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4229/hpr4229.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-25 21:46:01
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4229 for Thursday the 17th of October 2024.
|
|
Today's show is entitled Neurodiversity and Hacking.
|
|
It is the tenth show of Lee and is about 21 minutes long.
|
|
It carries a clean flag.
|
|
The summary is, Lee talks to Matthew about the link between Neurodiversity and Hacking.
|
|
Hi, I'm Lee and today I'm joined by someone I know from the Neurodiversity Group in the British
|
|
Computing Society and his name is Matthew and today we're going to be having a chat
|
|
about Hacking and Neurodiversity.
|
|
Hello Matthew.
|
|
Hi, thank you for talking to me today.
|
|
So to start off today, would you like to introduce yourself and tell us where your interests
|
|
in technology and Neurodiversity derive from?
|
|
Yeah, absolutely. So hi everyone, I'm Matthew Bellringer.
|
|
I'm a Neurodiversity and Innovation Specialist.
|
|
So I work with Neurodivergent people and businesses.
|
|
We're coming up with new approaches to things and using technology to do so.
|
|
I also work with organizations that want to deliver innovative services to Neurodivergent people.
|
|
My relationship between technology and Neurodiversity go a very long way back.
|
|
At the age of six, I was diagnosed with dyslexia, having been kind of thrown out of infant
|
|
school and I ended up the psychologist who diagnosed me, recommended that I get a computer.
|
|
And this was in the mid 80s, so this was not the situation we're in where computers were
|
|
ubiquitous in every household as they are now.
|
|
So I started using that and kind of always used computers right the way through my school
|
|
and just to get stuff done. And over time just became very proficient in using them.
|
|
Before most people had even used them regularly for productivity.
|
|
And so what happened is when I went to university and then the first time around I went to
|
|
university again, undiagnosed autism and ADHD, I didn't do terribly well, I left in a hurry and
|
|
then I started doing assistive training for other disabled people around how they could use
|
|
their computers and use them to work with, you know, as it really is an accessibility aid.
|
|
So this relationship between technology and Neurodiversity has run through basically my entire
|
|
career and continues to do so today around where I'm working with Neurodivergent people about how
|
|
they can use technology to make their lives easier, make, you know, play to their strengths
|
|
rather than struggling with difficulties and those kinds of things.
|
|
Okay, that's that's interesting. It's actually a new guy at school. He had a laptop because he had
|
|
dyslexia and I think that led him very directly into a career in IT. That was me. That was that was
|
|
basically me. Yeah. Yeah. So let's go back a little, what does Neurodiversity mean?
|
|
Oh, okay. So, so Neurodiversity, for me, I use, I use the kind of standard original definition
|
|
of Neurodiversity, which is that everyone is Neurodiverse. We're Neurodiverse as a population.
|
|
Everyone has different experiences on the basis of their Neurology. We think and feel
|
|
and experience the world differently because we all have different neural wiring.
|
|
And that that's a simple factor biology. It's a simple part. It's just part of humanity.
|
|
And I happen to view it as largely a, the Neurodiversity exists because in general, it is beneficial
|
|
to us as a species. So there are situations where to the individual and perhaps to society,
|
|
it isn't beneficial. But in general, the idea that we all have these different experiences is
|
|
beneficial to everyone. Within that space, there's also the idea of Neurodivergence.
|
|
And to be Neurodivergent is to sit outside the expected norms of how your brain is supposed to
|
|
work, how you're supposed to experience, think and feel about the world. And those are social.
|
|
They're partly kind of weight of numbers as well. More people do think more similarly to each
|
|
other and they're kind of the middle of the bell curve. If we sit outside of the middle of those
|
|
whatever bell curves we're talking about, then we're Neurodivergent. We experience things
|
|
differently to the way that they're expected. And that can be associated with a specific
|
|
condition like autism ADHD, dyslexia, Tourette, all of those things. Or it might not be. It might
|
|
just be that fundamentally experiencing the world differently. And as I say, I think the thing
|
|
to understand is, is that plurality? Is that it's not that one is better than the other? It's about
|
|
the range than the diversity within the population and how we all communicate that matters.
|
|
Okay, so I could describe myself as Neurodivergent. If I'm on the autistic spectrum, for example,
|
|
other people might say that they have ADHD, they also would call themselves Neurodivergent.
|
|
You'd expect some quite different things from someone who has ADHD, from someone who has autism,
|
|
but there are similarities maybe on a more abstract level about those different conditions.
|
|
Completely. Yeah. So what is your understanding of the term hacking? And would you say there's
|
|
a crossover between Neurodivercity, unconventional perspectives in hacking?
|
|
So I understand the term hacking to mean making systems behave in ways that they weren't designed to.
|
|
And as a morally, completely morally neutral thing, it's simply finding a system and exploring
|
|
the other ways, the other modes of behavior that weren't originally intended when it was put together.
|
|
I think there's also a big aspect of that that's about combining things in unexpected ways.
|
|
Things that aren't supposed to go together aren't supposed to be used together,
|
|
but happen to cause different behavior systems to behave in different ways when they are combined
|
|
in that way. And then there's looking at things just from a fundamentally different perspective.
|
|
If you look at things from a different angle, you can see ways of the system could behave or
|
|
that things could be used that are fundamentally different to the conventional view.
|
|
And because as Neurodivergent people, we are often in that situation, we're coming from a different
|
|
perspective. We tend to see opportunities for the system to behave differently. And because
|
|
every system is designed, whether it's intentional or unlike whether it's been consciously designed
|
|
or whether it's just kind of come about through people making a whole bunch of decisions.
|
|
Those decisions support certain ways of being in the world and so certain ways of thinking about
|
|
things. And they implicitly exclude other ways of being in the world and other ways of thinking
|
|
about things. And as Neurodivergent people, we are living counted a lot of
|
|
situations where things basically just weren't designed for us. And that I think is a really
|
|
core aspect of why Neurodiversity and hacking intersect is because we kind of have to do this.
|
|
It's just to get by. And so that all experience is a big aspect of just being Neurodivergent in the
|
|
world doing what we need to do. We need to develop some degree of skill in working with systems
|
|
so they work for us, which implicitly means working with systems in ways that they weren't
|
|
designed to because when they were designed, the person wasn't thinking of us when they were designing it.
|
|
Okay, so you're kind of saying the reason Neurodivergent people might be more attracted to the
|
|
making systems behaving the way they're designed to is firstly that different unconventional
|
|
perspective, but also just a matter of necessity of having to do that in everyday life.
|
|
Yeah. Okay, so where do the concepts of Neurodiversity and hacking not align? For example,
|
|
can Neurotypical people be proficient hackers? I think so, but perhaps with a slightly different
|
|
emphasis on what those outcomes are. So I like to and thinking about this from an innovation
|
|
perspective, which is a very similarly related concept. I sometimes divide two types of innovation.
|
|
One is more of the same, but better. That tends to focus on efficiency. It tends to focus on
|
|
improvements to existing methods. And the alternative to that is something that's fundamentally
|
|
different, something that's blue water innovation that establishes a new way of doing things on a
|
|
more fundamental level. And Neurotypical people tend to excel at the more of the same, but better.
|
|
So where there's opportunities for optimizing the behavior of the system.
|
|
That can often be a very good thing that Neurotypical people can do because they're coming from a
|
|
similar perspective to the person who originally designed the thing. They can kind of put
|
|
themselves in those shoes and then add their extra knowledge. Whereas for Neurodivergent people,
|
|
we're very often coming from a different perspective. And so we can spot those opportunities
|
|
looking from the outside. So I think if you think about the kind of hacking that where you're looking
|
|
from within the thing, that's actually often more effectively done by Neurotypical people.
|
|
Whereas the kind of hacking that comes from looking at the thing from outside and getting that
|
|
kind of outside of you, that's very often more effectively done by Neurodivergent people,
|
|
or people with other forms of cognitive diversity. So that's another aspect of this. Neurodiverstia
|
|
isn't the only form of cognitive diversity. If we have different life experiences, if we
|
|
grew up in a different cultural background to the one around us, or we had an unconventional
|
|
childhood, that can also lead to quite differences in perspective that can give you that outside
|
|
a perspective too. Right, thanks. What common misconceptions are there about
|
|
versus Neurodiverstia and secondly hacking, would you say? Yeah, so I think there are, I mean,
|
|
there are a lot of misconceptions about both. For me, one of the big ones is this fundamental
|
|
concept of neurodiversity. Is this idea that individuals are neurodiverse and that there's just
|
|
this kind of monolithic group of neurodiverse people, or more commonly, actually, that neurodiversity
|
|
basically equals autism. And so that idea that we're just almost like it's a polite way of saying
|
|
autistic. Personally, obviously, I don't feel that there's any shame in being autistic. It's not
|
|
something that needs politeness. It's just an aspect of my identity, just like I'm quite tall.
|
|
So it's neutral in the same way. So that idea of like neurodiversity and not being comfortable
|
|
talking about the actual conditions. And related to that is the stereotypes we have associated with
|
|
each of the conditions. The idea that one person who has a say, if one person is autistic,
|
|
that their experience is going to be very much like someone else who's autistic, which just isn't
|
|
true. There's so many different aspects of experience and the way these conditions show up is so
|
|
different. And then you get these kind of stereotypes around strengths and what people are good at
|
|
and how the things combine. So there are a lot of, you know, particularly in the tech industry,
|
|
there's a specific kind of sort of stereotype about someone who particularly is autistic or is
|
|
neurodivergent. And those just aren't necessarily very true. They don't fit a lot of people's lived
|
|
experience and they're very limiting even where people do claim to fit them. So I think those
|
|
the stereotypes and the associations that people have are one of the big areas where I think there
|
|
are a lot of misconceptions around that. And now in terms of hacking, I think the first one is
|
|
obviously that hacking is a destructive thing. It can be a very creative thing. And it can be a very
|
|
necessary thing. As I've mentioned, we some of us just need to make systems behave in different
|
|
ways in order to get through the day. So the idea that being able to do that is a marker of some
|
|
kind of ill intent is really problematic. And I think you can see that. Sometimes it shows up in
|
|
the medical system, actually, and the way people are treated is like, you just do what you do to get
|
|
by. And then that's pathologized. That's seen as problematic. That might be seen as something
|
|
you get punished for. And very often, we might have experienced that at school. I very much learn
|
|
around, you know, I had to work things out my way and then show my working in inverted commas
|
|
in the way that I was taught to working backwards from the answer that I got my own way.
|
|
So yeah, that reminds me of the film about Ramanujan, the mathematician and he hated writing
|
|
proofs, but he knew all these wonderful theories. He just couldn't prove them.
|
|
Yeah, exactly. And it's just we go a different way. And I think another it like, and maybe there's
|
|
one slightly more trivial one is this is just the idea of like ADHD hacks or this idea of these very
|
|
trivial interventions. They kind of can be useful. And I think remembering that sometimes when we say
|
|
hacks, we mean something that's quite quick and dirty and can be used in the moment, but isn't
|
|
something we necessarily want to rely on long term. It's not something we want to design in
|
|
necessarily. It's a temporary thing. I think this idea of like, oh, you can kind of fix your
|
|
experience as a neurodivergent person by adopting a relatively simple strategy that someone can tell
|
|
you in a short TikTok video is probably not a helpful thing to believe or to be telling people
|
|
is available. Yeah, I mean, I have to say sometimes tell my supervisor, I think this is a bit
|
|
of a hack. And he generally he'll say to me, he thinks hacks can turn out bad in the long term.
|
|
But I'm the hack is the right way of doing things. That's the other side of the coin. Yeah,
|
|
there's kind of it points towards a good solution sometimes, but it isn't necessarily a good
|
|
solution in and of itself. I think that's an important thing to remember.
|
|
Yeah. Okay, so can you give some examples of individuals or groups of people or subcultures
|
|
or instances in the major out of neurodiversity and hacking?
|
|
Yeah, absolutely. I think the two big areas that jump out for me, particularly in the tech
|
|
industry and the amount of neurodivergent people working in testing and working in IT security.
|
|
Because both of those practices really that that value of seeing things from the outside,
|
|
seeing problems from a different angle means that it's incredibly helpful to be able to account
|
|
for all the possible cases that you might encounter when something gets out into the outside world.
|
|
And to kind of illustrate this, there's this joke about a tester walks into a bar and
|
|
they order one drink and then they order 2037 drinks and then they order minus one drinks
|
|
and all the testing goes fine. And then the first customer walks into the bar asks,
|
|
where's the toilet and then the bar explodes. So those kinds of those kinds of iterations where
|
|
you're coming at things from a different angle where where you need to step outside of that space,
|
|
that can be really, really useful for neurodivergent people. And that's also why it's so effective
|
|
in IT security because it's, you know, you see a system working. It's very hard to step outside
|
|
of the assumptions you've made about how that's designed. If you're coming from a different set of
|
|
assumptions, you can see that much more clearly. So how does this insight inform how we should
|
|
go about educating and introducing people into this space as a correct IP? Yeah, I mean, one of
|
|
the difficulties is if you are a neurodivergent, you're probably not have had an ideal situation
|
|
in education, particularly in the UK, we're not very good at delivering an education that really
|
|
supports a wide range of different thinking styles and approaches. We're very much do it this way
|
|
and very specific about that and all of the ways that things are assessed are very specific
|
|
and expect you to do things in a very fixed, wrote way. So I think for me, one of the big things is
|
|
multiple pathways, flexibility, making things more centered in the individual person and how they
|
|
want to do things, which is a very big picture answer. But I think it's really important to say,
|
|
if we want more people to be able to do this, we need to give people flexibility and let people
|
|
practice this, you know, like it shouldn't be something you have to hide. It should be something
|
|
that you can cultivate and that you get support in cultivating. And I think there's a big thing
|
|
around this around how we're evaluating whether someone is capable of doing something and very often
|
|
qualifications are problematic because they're like, can you follow this method? That is the right
|
|
method of doing things. When we're fundamentally talking about someone with skills as a hacker,
|
|
what we're looking for is not someone who can follow a wrote method. That is the right method.
|
|
We're looking for someone who can find their own method, which often doesn't do terribly well in
|
|
qualification scenario. So I think looking to alternative things like accreditation, where you're
|
|
evaluated on stuff you have actually done in the real world rather than these imaginary scenarios
|
|
can be a lot more effective about getting people in if we actually want to see more of this.
|
|
Yeah, I mean myself I much prefer than to be the assessor and interview rather to actually be
|
|
set a real world task to complete. And then even if it means I do it in my own space and my own time
|
|
which I would actually do if I was actually doing the job rather than sitting in I don't know
|
|
somewhere or talking to someone on zooms they're asking me a question me telling them something
|
|
back that doesn't really assess what I'm capable of I don't think.
|
|
So let's finish off with a more lighthearted question. What do you think has been the contribution
|
|
to humanity of hackers? Well I mean I think hackers people who are looking at all of this stuff
|
|
we've designed and built and going oh this could be different. I think it's such a fundamental
|
|
contribution to humanity over time that I think it's really important that generation of
|
|
innovation of different ways of doing things and the opportunity that that creates for everyone
|
|
is a huge benefit. And I think we often see this in these strange edge spaces these spaces which
|
|
aren't really mainstream where you've got these funny little niches that then end up creating
|
|
something that's incredibly useful for everyone. One of it like a good example of this is say the
|
|
worldwide web and like HTTP as a protocol that was developed for very academic knowledge sharing
|
|
the whole internet was to some degree but that then becomes this incredibly useful platform for
|
|
a whole ton of different things but started off as this very niche little area solving a very
|
|
specific problem. And I think those strange little niches are very often really rich spaces for
|
|
hacking and for new ideas and for neurodivergent people. And ultimately I mean I fundamentally believe
|
|
that these alternative approaches these alternative perspectives can really work with problems that
|
|
can't be worked with effectively from a conventional perspective. So when we've got really big
|
|
problems that are going to affect everyone we need as many different eyes on the problem as
|
|
possible from as many different perspectives as possible because that's the only way that we're
|
|
going to get the kind of insight that will let us actually fix things and resolve that that's
|
|
going to be good for everyone. All right thanks very much Matthew for coming and talking to me
|
|
and talking to the HPI listeners. Is there anywhere that you would recommend people to look you up or
|
|
other resources people could look at to find out more? Yeah absolutely yeah I thought well thank you
|
|
for thank you for the interview of your very insightful questions and really really interesting
|
|
set of questions. So people want to find me they can find me at MatthewBelringer.com and they can
|
|
also find me on LinkedIn. There aren't that many MatthewBelringers on LinkedIn so you should
|
|
comfortably be able to find me with a headline around neurodiversity and innovation. I'm on both of
|
|
those places I share quite regular resources about really what it is to be being neurodivergent either
|
|
running your own business or working for other people in a professional capacity and how you can
|
|
really do more of what you like doing unless of what you don't that's a really big thing for me.
|
|
So yeah so please do reach out if if anyone has any questions or anything I'd love to
|
|
talk about this stuff as maybe obvious so please do get in touch if that's something that you're
|
|
interested in too. Okay well that concludes this episode and thank you everyone for listening.
|
|
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work. Today's show was
|
|
contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording podcast and click
|
|
on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hosting for HBR has been kindly
|
|
provided by an honesthost.com, the Internet Archive and our Sync.net. On the Satellite status
|
|
today's show is released under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
|