All Content from Business Insider 09月23日 17:32
自闭症人士 Dennis Tran 如何在技术领域发挥优势
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Dennis Tran 在27岁时被诊断出自闭症,这帮助他理解了自己独特的解决问题能力。他发现自闭症并没有成为他的限制,反而让他能够创新、解决问题并构建更适合人们的系统。尽管在寻求全职工作时遇到挑战,但他的诊断让他更愿意公开自己的身份,并积极投身于倡导工作。他现在能在重视神经多样性的环境中蓬勃发展,并认为自己的自闭症是他的超能力。

💡 Dennis Tran 在2020年被诊断出自闭症,他发现这一诊断帮助他理解了自己独特的解决问题能力,并将其视为一种优势。在没有技术学位的情况下,他的自闭症特质使他在质量保证(QA)领域脱颖而出。

🚀 尽管在早期职业生涯中,Tran 曾因难以适应不适合他的环境而感到挣扎,但他认识到自闭症并非限制,而是让他能够创新、解决问题并构建更人性化的系统。他现在积极倡导,并致力于在重视神经多样性的领域工作。

🌟 Tran 强调,当人们将神经多样性和残障视为劣势时,这令人感到痛苦,但这反映的是系统未能跟上时代,而非个体价值的体现。他认为自己的多种身份标签,包括自闭症,共同塑造了他,并从过去的劣势转变为现在的超能力。

Dennis Tran says it's painful when people view neurodivergence and disability as less than.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Dennis V. Tran, a 32-year-old research collaborator in Los Angeles. Business Insider has verified Tran's employment history with documentation. The following has been edited for length and clarity.

I wasn't diagnosed with autism until late 2020 at 27 years old. But as a professional with autism, my skills gave me an edge in breaking into quality assurance (QA) without a tech degree.

During my undergraduate studies, I didn't know what QA was or that it could be a viable career option. After graduating in 2015 with a degree in public health policy, I applied for an internship at a healthcare startup, and they assigned me to my first real taste of QA. From there, I transitioned into software QA almost by accident.

I've learned that autism isn't a limitation. It allows me to innovate, problem-solve, and build systems that serve people better. It's my superpower.

I never planned on working in the tech industry

While at the University of California, Irvine, I became involved in research labs and clinical research. I monitored metrics, kept experiments on track, and streamlined iPad processes in trials.

After graduating and completing my internship, a marketing colleague posted about me on social media to help me find work. A QA software company, Vablet, saw it and took me on.

I had no tech background, but I taught myself everything from scratch. I'd quickly glance over tutorial videos and the user guide, but most importantly, I just spent time playing and using the app and platforms. I was able to grasp platforms with ease within a couple of hours and days, which helped set me up for success in my role.

Before my autism diagnosis, I struggled to understand why I seemed to have more difficulty than others

I struggled with forming deep connections and friendships. After college, it became even lonelier.

Despite excelling in my QA role, the job ultimately became repetitive, and I needed novelty, innovation, and challenge. I worked at Vablet from 2016 to 2022. I had a difficult time finding a new job elsewhere. I'd send applications, but nothing landed.

After a family member suggested I might be autistic, I went to fill out questionnaires with a psychiatrist and was formally diagnosed. I started to understand I'd been living a neurodivergent life all along.

That's when I learned the statistic that 85% of college grads with autism are unemployed or underemployed. I realized my brain works differently. I could accomplish tasks in months that employers thought required five years of experience, but I didn't fit their expectations.

People often call me unique and rare. My diagnosis gave me a sense of empowerment, but it negatively affected my self-esteem and worth, as I kept getting turned down for jobs. Because I couldn't get a full-time job, I felt like a failure, despite my previous achievements.

After my diagnosis, I had to unmask

After my diagnosis, it became clear that I wanted to thrive and coexist with my disability & neurodivergence, so I reached out to a life coach.

Since working with my life coach, I started my own podcast and journey to help others, and this led to the advocacy work I do today and being open about who I am, my mental health, and my disability. For years, I had operated in survival mode, adapting to fit environments that weren't built for me. When I stopped masking, I had to relearn how to use my skills authentically.

My autism enables me to identify what others often miss: inefficiencies, bottlenecks, and trends. I translate those insights into strategy, making systems more intuitive, responsive, and human. When I'm engaged, I hyperfocus with precision and produce high-quality, thoughtful work. I approach problems differently, with creativity and nonlinear thinking, which often leads to innovative solutions.

My autism makes me a systems thinker with a big-picture vision. I don't just fix problems, I redesign processes to be more inclusive and effective.

I thrive in spaces that value my differences

I wanted to work in the disability and neurodiversity space, so in May, I started my new role as a research collaborator for Community-led Autism Research, Engagement, and Service (CARES). Instead of struggling to fit in, I've found places where my autism is seen as an asset. These environments let me leverage my skills fully and communicate my needs more clearly.

It's painful when people see disability or neurodivergence as less than, but the stigmas reflect a system that hasn't caught up, not our worth.

Being autistic, ADHD, partially blind, queer, and Vietnamese American from a low-income household isn't something to hide; it's what makes me who I am. What once felt like a weakness has become my superpower.

Do you have a story to share about being neurodiverse in tech? Contact the editor Tess Martinelli at tmartinelli@businessinsider.com.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Dennis Tran 自闭症 神经多样性 技术领域 质量保证 Autism Neurodiversity Tech Industry Quality Assurance
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