Home // ACHI 2016, The Ninth International Conference on Advances in Computer-Human Interactions // View article
Minimalistic Toy Robot Encourages Verbal and Emotional Expressions in Autism
Authors:
Irini Giannopulu
Valerie Montreynaud
Tomio Watanabe
Keywords: brain development; neurotypical children; children with autism; minimalistic robot; language; emotion; listener-speaker
Abstract:
Language offers the possibility to transfer information between speaker and listener who both possess the ability to use it. Using a “speaker-listener” situation, we have compared the verbal and the emotional expressions of neurotypical and autistic children aged 6 to 7 years. The speaker was always a child (neurotypical or autistic); the listener was a human InterActor or an InterActor robot, i.e., a small toy robot that reacts to speech expression by nodding only. The results suggest that a robot characterized by predictable reactions facilitate autistic children in expression. When comparing to the performance of neurotypical children, the data would indicate that minimalistic artificial environments have the potential to open the way for neuronal organization and reorganization with the ability to support the embrainment of verbal and emotional information processing among autistic children.
Pages: 267 to 273
Copyright: Copyright (c) IARIA, 2016
Publication date: April 24, 2016
Published in: conference
ISSN: 2308-4138
ISBN: 978-1-61208-468-8
Location: Venice, Italy
Dates: from April 24, 2016 to April 28, 2016