| Literature DB >> 24104517 |
Esubalew Bekele1, Julie A Crittendon1, Amy Swanson1, Nilanjan Sarkar1, Zachary E Warren2.
Abstract
It has been argued that clinical applications of advanced technology may hold promise for addressing impairments associated with autism spectrum disorders. This pilot feasibility study evaluated the application of a novel adaptive robot-mediated system capable of both administering and automatically adjusting joint attention prompts to a small group of preschool children with autism spectrum disorders (n = 6) and a control group (n = 6). Children in both groups spent more time looking at the humanoid robot and were able to achieve a high level of accuracy across trials. However, across groups, children required higher levels of prompting to successfully orient within robot-administered trials. The results highlight both the potential benefits of closed-loop adaptive robotic systems as well as current limitations of existing humanoid-robotic platforms.Entities:
Keywords: autism spectrum disorder; joint attention; robotics; technology
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24104517 PMCID: PMC3980197 DOI: 10.1177/1362361313479454
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autism ISSN: 1362-3613