| Literature DB >> 30211146 |
Giulio E Lancioni1, Nirbhay N Singh2, Mark F O'Reilly3, Jeff Sigafoos4, Gloria Alberti5, Viviana Perilli5, Valeria Chiariello5, Serafino Buono6.
Abstract
Background: People with intellectual disability and sensory or sensory-motor impairments may display serious problems in managing functional daily activities as well as leisure activities and communication with distant partners. Aim: The study assessed an upgraded smartphone-based program to foster independent leisure and communication activity of eight participants with mild to moderate intellectual disability, sensory or sensory-motor impairments, and limited speech skills. Method: The upgraded program was based on the use of (a) a Samsung Galaxy A3 smartphone with Android 6.0 Operating System, near-field communication, music and video player functions, and Macrodroid application, and (b) special radio frequency-code labels. Participants requested leisure and communication activities by placing mini objects or pictures representing those activities and containing frequency-code labels on the smartphone. The smartphone, via the Macrodroid application, read the labels (i.e., discriminated the participants' requests) and provided the participants with the activities requested.Entities:
Keywords: communication; intellectual disability; leisure; smartphone; technology; visual impairment
Year: 2018 PMID: 30211146 PMCID: PMC6122188 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2018.00234
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Participants' pseudonyms, chronological ages, sensory impairments, and Vineland age-equivalent scores for receptive communication.
| Neil | 58 | Mild visual impairment | 6;2 |
| Peter | 35 | Mild/moderate visual impairment | 5;1 |
| Amy | 42 | Severe visual impairment | 5;1 |
| Dan | 36 | Mild hearing loss corrected with hearing aids | 3;8 |
| Nancy | 43 | Mild/moderate visual impairment | 5;6 |
| Darren | 45 | Minimal residual vision | 4;3 |
| Paul | 36 | Total blindness and mild hearing loss corrected with hearing aids | 6;6 |
| Mat | 37 | Moderate/severe visual impairment | 4;8 |
Vineland age-equivalent scores are reported in “years” (numbers before the semicolon) and “months” (numbers after the semicolon).
The age-equivalent scores are based on the Italian standardization of the Vineland scales (.
Figure 1The eight panels provide a graphic view of the data of the eight participants during the baseline and the post-intervention phases. The black and gray bars indicate mean percentages of session time spent with independently accessed leisure and communication activities over blocks of sessions, respectively. The number of sessions included in each block (black- and gray-bar combination) is indicated by the numeral above it.