logo
‘It's the most empathetic voice in my life': How AI is transforming the lives of neurodivergent people

‘It's the most empathetic voice in my life': How AI is transforming the lives of neurodivergent people

Reuters27-07-2025
For Cape Town-based filmmaker Kate D'hotman, connecting with movie audiences comes naturally. Far more daunting is speaking with others. 'I've never understood how people [decipher] social cues,' the 40-year-old director of horror films says.
D'hotman has autism and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), which can make relating to others exhausting and a challenge. However, since 2022, D'hotman has been a regular user of ChatGPT, the popular AI-powered chatbot from OpenAI, relying on it to overcome communication barriers at work and in her personal life.
'I know it's a machine,' she says. 'But sometimes, honestly, it's the most empathetic voice in my life.'
Neurodivergent people — including those with autism, ADHD, dyslexia and other conditions — can experience the world differently from the neurotypical norm. Talking to a colleague, or even texting a friend, can entail misread signals, a misunderstood tone and unintended impressions.
AI-powered chatbots have emerged as an unlikely ally, helping people navigate social encounters with real-time guidance. Although this new technology is not without risks — in particular some worry about over-reliance — many neurodivergent users now see it as a lifeline.
How does it work in practice? For D'hotman, ChatGPT acts as an editor, translator and confidant. Before using the technology, she says communicating in neurotypical spaces was difficult. She recalls how she once sent her boss a bulleted list of ways to improve the company, at their request. But what she took to be a straightforward response was received as overly blunt, and even rude.
Now, she regularly runs things by ChatGPT, asking the chatbot to consider the tone and context of her conversations. Sometimes she'll instruct it to take on the role of a psychologist or therapist, asking for help to navigate scenarios as sensitive as a misunderstanding with her best friend. She once uploaded months of messages between them, prompting the chatbot to help her see what she might have otherwise missed. Unlike humans, D'hotman says, the chatbot is positive and non-judgmental.
That's a feeling other neurodivergent people can relate to. Sarah Rickwood, a senior project manager in the sales training industry, based in Kent, England, has ADHD and autism. Rickwood says she has ideas that run away with her and often loses people in conversations. 'I don't do myself justice,' she says, noting that ChatGPT has 'allowed me to do a lot more with my brain.' With its help, she can put together emails and business cases more clearly.
The use of AI-powered tools is surging. A January study conducted by Google and the polling firm Ipsos found that AI usage globally has jumped 48%, with excitement about the technology's practical benefits now exceeding concerns over its potentially adverse effects. In February, OpenAI told Reuters that its weekly active users surpassed 400 million, of which at least 2 million are paying business users.
But for neurodivergent users, these aren't just tools of convenience and some AI-powered chatbots are now being created with the neurodivergent community in mind.
Michael Daniel, an engineer and entrepreneur based in Newcastle, Australia, told Reuters that it wasn't until his daughter was diagnosed with autism — and he received the same diagnosis himself — that he realised how much he had been masking his own neurodivergent traits. His desire to communicate more clearly with his neurotypical wife and loved ones inspired him to build Neurotranslator, an AI-powered personal assistant, which he credits with helping him fully understand and process interactions, as well as avoid misunderstandings.
'Wow … that's a unique shirt,' he recalls saying about his wife's outfit one day, without realising how his comment might be perceived. She asked him to run the comment through NeuroTranslator, which helped him recognise that, without a positive affirmation, remarks about a person's appearance could come across as criticism.
'The emotional baggage that [normally] comes along with those situations would just disappear within minutes,' he says of using the app.
Since its launch in September, Daniel says NeuroTranslator has attracted more than 200 paid subscribers. An earlier web version of the app, called Autistic Translator, amassed 500 monthly paid subscribers.
As transformative as this technology has become, some warn against becoming too dependent. The ability to get results on demand can be 'very seductive,' says Larissa Suzuki, a London-based computer scientist and visiting NASA researcher who is herself neurodivergent.
Overreliance could be harmful if it inhibits neurodivergent users' ability to function without it, or if the technology itself becomes unreliable — as is already the case with many AI search-engine results, according to a recent study from the Columbia Journalism Review. 'If AI starts screwing up things and getting things wrong,' Suzuki says, 'people might give up on technology, and on themselves."
Baring your soul to an AI chatbot does carry risk, agrees Gianluca Mauro, an AI adviser and co-author of Zero to AI. 'The objective [of AI models like ChatGPT] is to satisfy the user,' he says, raising questions about its willingness to offer critical advice. Unlike therapists, these tools aren't bound by ethical codes or professional guidelines. If AI has the potential to become addictive, Mauro adds, regulation should follow.
A recent study by Carnegie Mellon and Microsoft (which is a key investor in OpenAI) suggests that long-term overdependence on generative AI tools can undermine users' critical-thinking skills and leave them ill-equipped to manage without it. 'While AI can improve efficiency,' the researchers wrote, 'it may also reduce critical engagement, particularly in routine or lower-stakes tasks in which users simply rely on AI.'
While Dr. Melanie Katzman, a clinical psychologist and expert in human behaviour, recognises the benefits of AI for neurodivergent people, she does see downsides, such as giving patients an excuse not to engage with others.
A therapist will push their patient to try different things outside of their comfort zone. "I think it's harder for your AI companion to push you," she says.
But for users who have come to rely on this technology, such fears are academic.
'A lot of us just end up kind of retreating from society,' warns D'hotman, who says that she barely left the house in the year following her autism diagnosis, feeling overwhelmed. Were she to give up using ChatGPT, she fears she would return to that traumatic period of isolation.
'As somebody who's struggled with a disability my whole life,' she says, 'I need this.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tesla awards boss Elon Musk $29bn in shares
Tesla awards boss Elon Musk $29bn in shares

BBC News

time9 hours ago

  • BBC News

Tesla awards boss Elon Musk $29bn in shares

Tesla has granted its chief executive Elon Musk $29bn (£21.7bn) worth of its shares, in an attempt to keep the billionaire at the move comes after a US court struck down his 2018 pay package, worth more than $50bn, ruling that it was "unfair to shareholders".Musk has been appealing the decision made by the Delaware court in 2024 and on Monday Tesla told shareholders it was "confident" that the $29bn of shares "will incentivize Elon to remain at Tesla" especially as "the war for AI talent is intensifying".The award should boost Musk's voting power on the electric car company's board. "It is imperative to retain and motivate our extraordinary talent, beginning with Elon", Tesla's board wrote on X, a platform owned by Musk, adding that "no one matches Elon's remarkable combination of leadership experience, technical expertise".The company said the billionaire had a "proven track record" in building "revolutionary and profitable businesses".Tech firms trying to assert themselves in the AI sector have been offering huge sums to workers at rivals in an effort to persuade them to join them and boost their founder Mark Zuckerberg was said to have recently tried to lure top developers from ChatGPT-creator OpenAI with million-dollar pay Microsoft's AI division, headed up by former Google DeepMind co-founder Mustafa Suleyman, recently gained several new hires from Google's the company was at an "inflection point" and needed Musk's prowess as it pivots from being an electric vehicle firm to an AI and robotics focussed company added that the share ward would be attractive for Musk "with other "demands on his time and attention".Musk's other roles include executive positions at xAI, Neuralink, and The Boring Company, which makes tunnels and other infrastructure in the recently announced that he was stepping back from politics, after a stint as US President Donald Trump's advisor. Additional reporting by Liv McMahon.

Love Island reveals fate of All Stars spin-off series ahead of tonight's explosive finale
Love Island reveals fate of All Stars spin-off series ahead of tonight's explosive finale

Daily Mail​

time10 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Love Island reveals fate of All Stars spin-off series ahead of tonight's explosive finale

Love Island has revealed the fate of the All Stars spin-off series ahead of Monday night's finale. The ITV2 show, which sees previous popular Islanders return to the villa in a second chance at finding The One, hit our screens back in January 2024. All Stars proved a massive hit with viewers and has gone on to have two successful series since then. Fans will be happy to know that the spin-off will be returning for a third instalment next year in South Africa. It will be back on our screens at the start of 2026 and will run for six weeks, instead of the previous five. Creative Director at Lifted Talent, Mike Spencer-Hayter said: ' Love Island: All Stars has quickly established itself as a stand-alone hit, keeping fans of the show gripped by iconic Islanders from the past 10 years returning for another chance to find love. The show, which sees previous popular Islanders return to the villa in a second chance at finding The One, hit our screens back in January 2024 'We are very excited about series 3 and you can expect the twists and turns to continue in All Stars, after an incredible smash hit summer series.' Amanda Stavri, Commissioning Editor, Reality at ITV added: 'With over 2 billion streams, the Love Island brand continues to thrive, with our All Stars series fast becoming a staple in our reality schedule. 'We can't wait to kick start our third series and set about bringing back some of the viewers' favourite Islanders for another unmissable series.' The first series of Love Island All Stars was won by Molly Smith, 31, and Tom Clare, 25. This year saw Gabby Allen and Casey O'Gorman hit the top spot. The news comes ahead of the final of the 12 series of the ITV2 dating show, which will air on Monday night (August 4). Yasmin and Jamie, Toni and Cach, Angel and Ty and Shakira and Harry are battling it out for the £50k cash prize. Bookies have revealed that a shock couple have emerged as the favourites to win just hours ahead of the live final on Monday evening. As four couples remain to battle it all out on the hit dating show, Meg and Dejon were the latest couple to get the chop during Sunday's instalment. Now, Bookies odds have revealed that Harry and Shakira are tipped to win the ITV2 dating show despite the pair having had a turbulent time in the villa. According to Ladbrokes, the couple, who have only been together a week, are tipped to win by a massive 10/11. This latest twist has seen the new favourites' odds tumble from 6/1 over the weekend. It was with Yasmin and Jamie, but they have gone out to 7/2 from 11/8 as the frontrunners. Longtime favourites Toni and Cach are still 7/4 from 6/4, while Angel and Ty prop up the betting at 18/1. Cal Gildart of Ladbrokes said: 'After all the attraction, the tension, it comes down to tonight. And the odds don't lie! 'While Shakira and Harry might not be the most popular contestants among the fanbase, punters clearly think that the crown is theirs.' Love Island hit our screens in 2015. The programme has previously been presented by Caroline Flack and Laura Whitmore. The show is currently presented by Maya Jama, 30.

Mayday, mayday! How will Nigeria and Nigerians survive now Kemi Badenoch has cut us adrift?
Mayday, mayday! How will Nigeria and Nigerians survive now Kemi Badenoch has cut us adrift?

The Guardian

time10 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Mayday, mayday! How will Nigeria and Nigerians survive now Kemi Badenoch has cut us adrift?

Paul Mooney, the late great African-American comedian and one of the most insightful yet hilarious intellectuals on matters of race, once quipped that every 'racially aggrieved' person once deceased returns in another body to collect what is owed to them. Illustrating the point he suggested that the first Black Oscar winner, Hattie McDaniel (perhaps most famous for playing Mammy in Gone With the Wind), had returned to the world as Oprah Winfrey. If Mooney's thesis is to be believed, there is amusement to be had guessing which figure from history has returned to us in the form of a newly 'ex-Nigerian' Olukemi Olufunto Adegoke Badenoch, the leader of the Conservative party Appearing on a podcast last week, Badenoch said that she no longer identifies as Nigerian. This was bizarre even by Badenochian standards. Her words: 'I don't identify with it [Nigeria] any more. Most of my life has been in the UK …' She went further: 'I'm Nigerian through ancestry, by birth, despite not being born there because of my parents … but by identity, I'm not really.' The podcast presenter, the former Tory MP and all-round lovely chap Gyles Brandreth, deserves an award for not falling into a laughter-induced coma as Olukemi Olufunto desperately struggled with a self-imposed form of the late Norman Tebbit's 'whose side are you on anyway' cultural loyalty test. Badenoch isn't a runaway favourite. Just today Liz Truss, momentarily the Tory leader, now the stuff of actual stand-up comedy, accused her of 'repeating spurious narratives' about the economy. That's a bit cats in a true blue sack: but, listening to the leader of the opposition, now and previously, on matters of race and identity, I do find her confused and confusing. For someone keen to shed the weight of Nigerian origins, she appears to make much of them, if negatively. Nigerians in the diaspora tend to obsess about three topics: making money, Premier League football and Nigeria. Of this cohort, Badenoch sounds like a recent 'Japa' (a person who migrated from Nigeria usually to the west) who just cannot stop talking about 'back home'. A few months ago, the theme was ethnic enmity and corruption. Last month, doing the anti-immigration two-step on Fareed Zakaria's CNN show, she said her daughters were unable to attain Nigerian citizenship because 'I am a woman'. That was sad: cue violins. But it's also nonsense. The Nigerian constitution confers citizenship on to her children by dint of the fact that one of their parents or grandparents is Nigerian – which is actually more liberal and inclusive than the British approach to citizenship. It is infuriating that Badenoch tends not to do interviews with people with knowledge of Nigeria or even honest brokers on the Black experience in Britain. The result is that her more confusing pronouncements – such as the contention she 'doesn't like socialism' because of her experiences in Nigeria – go unchallenged. A clued-up interviewer might say: 'I put it to you that Nigeria is one of the most brutally capitalist nations on Earth, one without any real welfare state. You actually grew up in a recently liberated former British colony that was struggling under the weight of history and IMF-imposed structural adjustment programmes – the mother of all austerity regimes.' That's why her response to even the prospect of an appropriate interviewer is to run a one-minute mile. On one level it's all comedic, but it also seems sadly revealing. The colonial mindset that everything western is unquestionably superior is one that too many Nigerians have yet to discard: especially Nigeria's political elite. These interviews also reveal something significant about Britain and the Conservative party. She says these things in public, knowing there is a market for them. In Brandreth's podcast, Badenoch says she has not experienced racial prejudice in the UK 'in any meaningful form', adding, 'People didn't treat me differently, and it's why I'm so quick to defend the UK whenever there are accusations of racism.' That's great for her – go Kemi. But it hardly describes the general Black experience – as we might hope someone with such a profile would do – or anything backed up by data. So she is spouting derogatory nonsense about her country of cultural origin and misleads about the country she calls home. If there is value to her public utterances, it is hard to discern what that is. These are trying times, but those of us who feel proudly able to carry multiple identities – enriched by that privilege and truth – will have to go on without Kemi. Nigerians will have to love her, accepting that love is unrequited. Black Britons will seek to know and understand her, even if she shows no obvious yen to know or understand them. And people can change: for the day will come when tickling rightwing tummies no longer works, and VIP Kemi returns to mundane Earth as Olukemi Olufunto Adegoke Badenoch. We'll see what she says then. Nels Abbey is an author, broadcaster and the founder of Uppity: the Intellectual Playground

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store