Brains@Work - The Double Empathy Problem | Decoding the Communication Gap
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
Innovation doesn't happen in a vacuum; it happens in the space between two minds. But what happens when those minds speak different neurological languages?
In this episode of Brains at Work, we explore the Double Empathy Problem, a theory proposed by Damian Milton in 2012. We move away from the outdated idea that neurodivergent individuals "lack empathy" and instead look at the breakdown of reciprocal understanding. In a business context, solving this problem is the secret to unlocking true team synergy and radical innovation.
Inside the Episode:
-
A Two-Way Street: Understanding that communication failure is rarely one-sided; it's a mismatch between two different ways of experiencing the world.
-
The "Translation" Tax: How the burden of adaptation has historically fallen on neurodivergent employees, and why this exhausts your most creative talent.
-
Mutual Adaptation: How teams can build a "third language"—a shared communication framework that respects both neurotypical and neurodivergent processing.
-
The Innovation Fertile Ground: Why cognitive friction, when managed through double empathy, becomes the primary driver for "out-of-the-box" solutions and disruptive ideas.
Strategic Insight:
Empathy is not a soft skill; it is a diagnostic tool. When a leader applies the principle of Double Empathy, they stop seeing "difficult" communication and start seeing "untranslated" potential. Bridging this gap is where the next big idea is born.