“…Previous evidence supports that knowledge about ASD and social contact with people with ASD influence positive attitudes toward people with ASD and their families (Chu et al, 2021;Dachez et al, 2015;Gemegah et al, 2021;Kuzminski et al, 2019). Several researchers have investigated the knowledge about ASD and the attitudes of unaffected people towards people with ASD in community samples from different cultures (Cage et al, 2019;Chu et al, 2021;Dachez et al, 2015;Dickter et al, 2020;Durand-Zaleski et al, 2012;Gemegah et al, 2021;Jensen et al, 2016;Jones et al, 2021;Kuzminski et al, 2019;Surmen et al, 2015;Wang et al, 2012). Studies from developed countries with individualist communities such as Great Britain, the USA, and Australia reveal higher levels of knowledge about ASD and lower levels of stigma (Cage et al, 2019;Jones et al, 2021;Kuzminski et al, 2019;Obeid et al, 2015), compared to studies from developing and underdeveloped countries with collectivist communities such as Malaysia, Turkey, and China, which reveal moderate or low levels of knowledge and higher levels of stigma (Chu et al, 2021;Surmen et al, 2015;Wang et al, 2012).…”