Site icon DailyGenius.com

9955 2



Health

The British robot teaching social skills to autistic children

The British robot teaching social skills to autistic children


“This is nice, it tickles me,” Kaspar the social robot tells four-year-old Finn as they play together at an autism school north of London.

Kaspar, developed by the University of Hertfordshire, also sings song, imitates eating, plays the tambourine and combs his hair during their sessions aimed at helping Finn with his social interaction and communication.

If Finn gets too rough, the similarly sized Kaspar cries: “Ouch, that hurt me.” A therapist is on hand to encourage the child to rectify his behaviour by tickling the robot’s feet.

Finn is one of around 170 autistic children that Kaspar has helped in a handful of schools and hospitals over the last 10 years.

But with approximately 700,000 people in Britain on the autism spectrum, according to the National Autistic Society who will mark World Autism Day on Sunday, the university want Kaspar to help more people.

“Our vision is that every child in a school or a home or in a hospital could get a Kaspar if they wanted to,” Kerstin Dautenhahn, professor of artificial intelligence at the University of Hertfordshire, told Reuters.

Achieving that goal will largely depend on the results of a two-year clinical trial with the Hertfordshire Community NHS Trust, which, if successful, could see Kaspar working in hospitals nationwide.

TRACKS, an independent charity and specialist early years centre for children with autism in Stevenage, have seen positive results from working with Kaspar, who sports a blue cap and plaid shirt for play sessions.

Kaspar, a child-sized humanoid robot developed at the University of Hertfordshire to interact and help improve the lives of children with autism is seen at the University of Hertfordshire, in Stevenage, Britain January 30, 2017. REUTERS/Matthew Stock

 

 

 

“We were trying to teach a little boy how to eat with his peers. He usually struggled with it because of his anxiety issues,” said deputy principal Alice Lynch.

“We started doing it with Kaspar and he really, really enjoyed feeding Kaspar, making him eat when he was hungry, things like that. Now he’s started to integrate into the classroom and eat alongside his peers. So things like that are just a massive progression.”

Many children with autism find it hard to decipher basic human communication and emotion so Kaspar’s designers avoided making him too lifelike and instead opted for simplified, easy to process features.

Autism support groups have been impressed.

“Many autistic people are drawn to technology, particularly the predictability it provides, which means it can be a very useful means of engaging children, and adults too,” Carol Povey, director of the National Autistic Society’s Centre for Autism, told Reuters.

“This robot is one of a number of emerging technologies which have the potential to make a huge difference to people on the autism spectrum.”

Continue Reading

You may also like…

Reuters News


Comments


More in Health


  • Education

    Teens who endure bullying are more likely to smoke, drink and use drugs

    By Reuters News

    Children who are bullied in fifth grade are more likely to become depressed and experiment with…




  • Health

    How to eat healthily when you travel

    By Frida Harju

    Whether you are flying to the other side of the globe on a holiday, or just…




  • Health

    Mindfulness meditation ‘works better for women than men’

    By Reuters News

    In a college course that included meditation training, women were more likely than men to report…




  • Health

    Mindfulness-based stress reduction only slightly improves low back pain

    By Nikki Sturzaker

    Mindfulness-based stress reduction programs (MSBR) appear to improve low back pain only slightly, and only temporarily,…




  • Education

    Bullying may be decreasing in US schools

    By Daily Genius Staff

    The various efforts used to curb bullying in U.S. schools may be working, a new study…




  • Education

    College is ‘the gateway to marijuana’

    By Reuters News

    College is increasingly a gateway for young adults in the U.S. to begin using marijuana and…




  • Education

    Can playground design help curb bullying?

    By Reuters News

    Playgrounds designed with risk-taking in mind may mean more pushing and shoving during recess, but they…




  • Health

    Social media can lead to obesity and loneliness (and how can we escape it)

    By Daily Genius Staff

    Social media was supposed to connect us all but instead it’s making us lonely, disconnected and…




  • Health

    Why, and how, do we swear?

    By Miriam Plieninger

    Whether you’re staunchly anti-swearing, or unapologetically foul-mouthed, you can’t deny that swear words are a significant…




Why, and how, do we swear?

Social media can lead to obesity and loneliness (and how can we escape it)

Most Read This Week


Education

Why mathematics classes need a makeover




Education

The ten happiest words in the Norwegian language (and why you need them)




Education

Can playground design help curb bullying?




Education

Blackstone in talks to acquire Ascend Learning




Education

A delightful way to teach kids about computers and coding




Health

How to eat healthily when you travel




Education

What you need to produce a successful school garden




Education

College is ‘the gateway to marijuana’




Education

Bullying may be decreasing in US schools




Health

Mindfulness-based stress reduction only slightly improves low back pain