| Literature DB >> 35161697 |
Amal Alabdulkareem1, Noura Alhakbani1, Abeer Al-Nafjan2.
Abstract
Recent studies have shown that children with autism may be interested in playing with an interactive robot. Moreover, the robot can engage these children in ways that demonstrate essential aspects of human interaction, guiding them in therapeutic sessions to practice more complex forms of interaction found in social human-to-human interactions. We review published articles on robot-assisted autism therapy (RAAT) to understand the trends in research on this type of therapy for children with autism and to provide practitioners and researchers with insights and possible future directions in the field. Specifically, we analyze 38 articles, all of which are refereed journal articles, that were indexed on Web of Science from 2009 onward, and discuss the distribution of the articles by publication year, article type, database and journal, research field, robot type, participant age range, and target behaviors. Overall, the results show considerable growth in the number of journal publications on RAAT, reflecting increased interest in the use of robot technology in autism therapy as a salient and legitimate research area. Factors, such as new advances in artificial intelligence techniques and machine learning, have spurred this growth.Entities:
Keywords: assistive technology; autism spectrum disorder; robot-assisted therapy; systematic literature review
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35161697 PMCID: PMC8840582 DOI: 10.3390/s22030944
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1The procedure that was used to extract and filter articles.
Figure 2Classification of the selected articles.
Social and emotional development articles.
| Focus | Definition | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Social development | These articles investigate how selected robot features affect the development of social communication skills in children with ASD, with the aim of helping the children to understand and behave appropriately in social situations and improve their ability to generate and respond to behavioral requests | Marino et al., 2020 [ |
| Measuring engagement | These articles measure engagement in RAAT by detecting their visual attention and positive changes in behaviors | Rakhymbayeva et al., 2021 [ |
| Emotional expression | These articles identify situation-based emotions with the aim of enhancing emotional expression among children with ASD | Anamaria et al., 2013 [ |
Communication- and interaction-development articles.
| Focus | Definition | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Verbal communication functionalities | These articles study the response of children with low-functioning autism to robots with verbal communication functionalities. | Lee et al., 2012 [ |
| Learning and interaction abilities | These articles focus on behavioral development, including learning alphabets, numbers, human recognition, and assistance in other learning tasks. | Bharatharaj et al., 2017 [ |
| General interventions between robot and children | These articles focus on improving spontaneous utterances, social interaction, joint attention, and requesting behaviors. | Boccanfuso et al., 2017 [ |
Cognitive development articles.
| Focus | Definition | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Proactivity and self-initiation | These articles focus on Pivotal Response Treatment (PRT), such as motivation for social interaction and self-initiations. Also, encouraging children’s creativity and initiative-taking. | Van den Berk-Smeekens et al., 2020 [ |
| Perception enhancement | These articles present cognitive wearable robotics for autism to improve perception. | Chen et al., 2021 [ |
Figure 3Demographic of participants’ age in experimental articles.
Target Behaviors.
| Target Behaviors | Definition | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Imitation | The child’s ability to learn and develop new skills by copying others’ behaviors | Rakhymbayeva et al., 2021 [ |
| Eye contact | A form of nonverbal communication and part of the child’s social development | Yun et al., 2016 [ |
| Joint attention | Attentional focus shared between two individuals looking at the same target using eye gaze or pointing | Taheri et al., 2018 [ |
| Turn-taking | The child’s ability to take turns and listen while another is speaking | Taheri et al., 2018 [ |
| Emotion recognition and expression | The child’s ability to read and interpret limited facial expressions and body language | Vanderborght et al., 2012 [ |
| Self-initiated interactions | The child’s ability to train themselves to initiate interactions and ask for things they need | Francois et al., 2009 [ |
| Triadic and dyadic interactions | The triadic model uses a robot as a mediator between the child and other people, whereas the dyadic model only involves the robot and child | Marino et al., 2020 [ |
Non-experimental articles classification.
| Type | Definition | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Review | These articles review robotic rehabilitation for cognitive training and review the IT platforms evaluated and RAAT for ASD children. | Yuan et al., 2021 [ |
| Framework | These articles provide a model/framework or architecture in the context of robot-assisted therapy, for example, testing the effect of a human-looking robot using the Bayesian model. They also present the theoretical framework in the context of RAAT tasks for children with ASD and a propose sensing framework with multi-sensory configuration and fusion. | Feng, Jia, & Wei, 2018 [ |
| Overview | These articles provide an overview of the ways in which the robot can engage autistic children. Also, they present an overview of projects on progress, such as Kaspar’s robot and CARER-AID projects. Both aimed at verifying the effects of the introduction of a humanoid robot in the clinical routine. | Conti et al., 2020 [ |
| Survey | These articles present a survey of expectations about the role of robots in robot-assisted therapy for children with ASD. | Coeckelbergh et al., 2016 [ |
| Guidelines | These articles provide guidelines for the design of social robots to be implemented as RAAT for children with ASD. Moreover, some articles present an alternative to implementing synchronous and asynchronous therapeutic sessions. | Huijnen et al., 2017 [ |
Figure 4Challenges and future directions of robot-assisted autism therapy.
Classification of articles by the online database.
| Online Database | No. of Articles | Online Database | No. of Articles |
|---|---|---|---|
| Springer Nature | 11 | John Benjamins Publishing Co. | 2 |
| Frontiers Media Sa | 4 | Amer. Assoc. Advancement Science | 1 |
| MDPI | 4 | Amer. Occupational Therapy Assoc. | 1 |
| Sage | 3 | Assoc. Computing Machinery | 1 |
| Elsevier | 2 | BMJ Publishing Group | 1 |
Classification of articles by journal.
| Journal | No. of Articles |
|---|---|
| International Journal of Social Robotics | 5 |
| Frontiers in Robotics and AI | 4 |
| Interaction Studies | 2 |
| International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems | 2 |
| Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2 |
| Robotics | 2 |
Distribution of the Web of Science categorization results.
| Field/Domain | No. of Articles | Field/Domain | No. of Articles |
|---|---|---|---|
| Robotics | 18 | Computer science (software engineering) | 1 |
| Developmental psychology | 4 | Educational research | 1 |
| Computer science (AI) | 3 | Special education | 1 |
| Multidisciplinary sciences | 3 | Multidisciplinary engineering | 1 |
| Automation control systems | 2 | Environmental studies | 1 |
| Communication | 2 | Ethics | 1 |
| Computer science (information systems) | 2 | History/philosophy of science | 1 |
| Electrical/electronic engineering | 2 | Instruments/instrumentation | 1 |
| Linguistics | 2 | Philosophy | 1 |
| General/internal medicine | 2 | Psychiatry | 1 |
| Applied physics | 2 | Clinical psychology | 1 |
| Rehabilitation | 2 | Respiratory system | 1 |
| Anthropology | 1 | Sociology | 1 |