Which Robot Features Can Stimulate Better Responses from Children with Autism in Robot-Assisted Therapy?

This study explores the response of autistic children to a few design features of the robots for autism therapy and provides suggestions on the robot features that have a stronger influence on the therapeutic process. First, we investigate the effect of selected robot features on the development of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of advanced robotic systems Vol. 9; no. 3
Main Authors Lee, Jaeryoung, Takehashi, Hiroki, Nagai, Chikara, Obinata, Goro, Stefanov, Dimitar
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Sage Publications Ltd 19.09.2012
SAGE Publishing
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Summary:This study explores the response of autistic children to a few design features of the robots for autism therapy and provides suggestions on the robot features that have a stronger influence on the therapeutic process. First, we investigate the effect of selected robot features on the development of social communication skills in autistic children. The results indicate that the toy's “face” and “moving limb” usually draw the children's attention and improve children's facial expression skills, but do not contribute to the development of other social communication skills. Secondly, we study the response of children with low-functioning autism to robots with verbal communication functionalities. Test results show that children interacted with the verbal-featured robot more intensively than with the experimenter. We conclude that robots with faces and moving limbs can engage autistic children in a better way. Facial expression of the robots can elicit a greater response than prompting by humans.
ISSN:1729-8806
1729-8814
DOI:10.5772/51128