“…A variety of social skills programs have been developed for autistic adults, under the assumption that improving social understanding and ability will improve functional outcomes [Eack et al, 2013;Spain & Blainey, 2015]. Because autistic adults without intellectual disability often perform poorly on measures of social cognition [Morrison et al, 2019;Velikonja, Fett, & Velthorst, 2019], including in the areas of social attention [Pelphrey et al, 2002;Sasson et al, 2007], affect recognition [Eack, Mazefsky, & Minshew, 2015], and advanced theory of mind [Baron-Cohen, Jolliffe, Mortimore, & Robertson, 1997], programs often focus on social cognition and explicitly teach strategies for improving performance Kandalaft, Didehbani, Krawczyk, Allen, & Chapman, 2013;Koegel, Ashbaugh, Navab, & Koegel, 2016;Turner-Brown, Perry, Dichter, Bodfish, & Penn, 2008]. Indeed, these programs often do improve performance on specific tasks [Bishop-Fitzpatrick, Minshew, & Eack, 2014;Kandalaft et al, 2013;Koegel et al, 2016], and confer other benefits like increasing knowledge about social skills [Gates, Kang, & Lerner, 2017] and facilitating friendship development when a peer group component is included [Spain & Blainey, 2015].…”