Holy crap, I just scored 33. I guess all that hard, bitter experience paid off.
Edit: I am a bit surprised to read about how hard other people found it. The options tended to have quite a predictable multiple-choice structure: two obviously implausible answers and two plausible ones. #21, for example, doesn't have the tension to be either confused or panicked. Embarrassment is plausible, but she doesn't look coy enough.
For the record, I am nowhere near this adept at spotting women engaged in the act of fantasising in real life. Multiple choice faces would be a great, if unrealistic, help.
30 here. And I got all the fantasizing/desire ones.
From my understanding, people on the autism spectrum have difficulty reading people's emotions and general social cues. I'm curious how these people develop these skills and what one can do to improve them. I ask this as a matter of personal interest; while I am somewhat neurotypical, I feel this is an area where I am very lacking.
(Sidenote: would this be considered an appropriate used of the discussion section?)