News In English

Artificial Playmates for Autistic Children | Bu yazıyı öner!

↓ Yazıya geç!

By Elsa Youngsteadt
NOW Daily News
15 February 2008

BOSTON– with spectrum disorder are unable to sustain play, make-believe games, and fluid social interaction–at least with real people. But psychologist and linguist Justine Cassell of Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, says that interaction with virtual peers releases hidden social skills in these .

A virtual child is a cartoonish-looking, gender-neutral 8-year-old that appears on a TV or projection screen. When it interacts with a real child, half of the action takes place in the real world, and half in the virtual world. Thanks to sensors on the toys, the can pass dolls back and forth between worlds, and the virtual child “watches” the real child as he or she plays. The virtual child can also speak in a recorded child’s voice and even uses lifelike expressions and gestures.

At a press briefing yesterday at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of (NOW’s publisher), Cassell said that she and her colleagues originally developed virtual 10 years ago, in part to study how literacy and conversation skills develop in normal . But “every time I presented the work,” she said, a parent of an autistic child would come to her and ask, ‘Please, can I get a copy of this software for my child?’ ”

Indeed, the group’s newest research, presented at a session this morning, demonstrates that interaction with virtual playmates may unlock social aptitude in autistic . During unsupervised play with typical , autistic don’t fill in pauses in conversation, nor do they ask or answer questions in a natural flow. But with a virtual playmate, autistic begin to do all these things after as little as 20 minutes. In another experiment, the autistic were given the opportunity to “become” the virtual child. When they hid behind a curtain and manipulated the digital child by means of a control panel, their virtual stand-ins interacted with typical in socially sensitive ways.

Cassell says autistic may be more at ease with virtual playmates because the virtual are more predictable, which could make them seem less threatening. Preliminary brain scans show that typical people have to think harder to relate to a virtual human than to a real one, and Cassell speculates that the reverse may be true in autistic . But will the autistic ’s newfound social savvy translate to subsequent interactions with real ? “That’s the million-dollar question,” Cassell told .

Theoretical linguist Cynthia Zocca, a graduate student at the University of Connecticut, Storrs, who attended Cassell’s presentation, enjoyed seeing the role of linguistics in creating virtual capable of conversation. She says it’s nice to see how the work is helping in the real world.

.
BilimarT|Halk İçin Bilim

Biyoetiketler: , ,

Benzer Yazılar

Yorumlar (Siz ilk Olun!)

Henüz bir yorum yok, Siz ilk olabilirsiniz.

Bir şeyler söyle

- Why ask? This confirms you are a human user!

eXTReMe Tracker