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Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 867630

Can humanoid robots be used in the assessement of autism spectrum disorder?


Šimleša, Sanja; Cepanec, Maja; Miklić, Damjan; Petric, Frano; Kovačić, Zdenko
Can humanoid robots be used in the assessement of autism spectrum disorder? // XI Autism-Europe International Congress
Edinburgh, 2016. str. 1-1 (poster, međunarodna recenzija, cjeloviti rad (in extenso), znanstveni)


CROSBI ID: 867630 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca

Naslov
Can humanoid robots be used in the assessement of autism spectrum disorder?

Autori
Šimleša, Sanja ; Cepanec, Maja ; Miklić, Damjan ; Petric, Frano ; Kovačić, Zdenko

Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Radovi u zbornicima skupova, cjeloviti rad (in extenso), znanstveni

Izvornik
XI Autism-Europe International Congress / - Edinburgh, 2016, 1-1

Skup
XI Autism-Europe International Congress

Mjesto i datum
Edinburgh, Ujedinjeno Kraljevstvo, 16.09.2016. - 18.09.2016

Vrsta sudjelovanja
Poster

Vrsta recenzije
Međunarodna recenzija

Ključne riječi
Autism diagnostics, socially assistive robotics, ASD

Sažetak
The diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder, which is usually given during the preschool period, depends on the education and experience of human evaluators. Research has shown that inter-rater reliability can be very low, even among experienced clinicians. The ongoing collaboration between the researchers from the Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing and Faculty of Education and Rehabilitation Sciences (University of Zagreb, Croatia) initiated the use of humanoid robots in the process of ASD assessment. The goal of the project is the development of a robot-based diagnostic protocol and testing of its verification in clinical settings. The expected benefit of using the robot is twofold: the robot always performs its actions in a predictable and consistent way, and it can use its sensors to catch aspects of a child's behavior that a human examiner might miss. In this poster we describe four tasks from the widely accepted ADOS protocol, that have been adapted to make them suitable for the Aldebaran Nao humanoid robot. These tasks include evaluating the child's response to being called by name, symbolic and functional imitation, joint attention task and assessing the child's ability to simultaneously communicate on multiple channels. We present the results of clinical trials of the proposed robot assisted protocol, performed on a population of typically developing preschool children and preschool children with ASD. The obtained results indicate that the use of robots in ASD assessment is a promising approach, but much work remains to be done before they become useful diagnosic tools.

Izvorni jezik
Engleski

Znanstvena područja
Temeljne tehničke znanosti



POVEZANOST RADA


Ustanove:
Edukacijsko-rehabilitacijski fakultet, Zagreb,
Fakultet elektrotehnike i računarstva, Zagreb

Profili:

Avatar Url Zdenko Kovačić (autor)

Avatar Url Maja Cepanec (autor)

Avatar Url Damjan Miklić (autor)

Avatar Url Frano Petric (autor)

Avatar Url Sanja Šimleša (autor)


Citiraj ovu publikaciju:

Šimleša, Sanja; Cepanec, Maja; Miklić, Damjan; Petric, Frano; Kovačić, Zdenko
Can humanoid robots be used in the assessement of autism spectrum disorder? // XI Autism-Europe International Congress
Edinburgh, 2016. str. 1-1 (poster, međunarodna recenzija, cjeloviti rad (in extenso), znanstveni)
Šimleša, S., Cepanec, M., Miklić, D., Petric, F. & Kovačić, Z. (2016) Can humanoid robots be used in the assessement of autism spectrum disorder?. U: XI Autism-Europe International Congress.
@article{article, author = {\v{S}imle\v{s}a, Sanja and Cepanec, Maja and Mikli\'{c}, Damjan and Petric, Frano and Kova\v{c}i\'{c}, Zdenko}, year = {2016}, pages = {1-1}, keywords = {Autism diagnostics, socially assistive robotics, ASD}, title = {Can humanoid robots be used in the assessement of autism spectrum disorder?}, keyword = {Autism diagnostics, socially assistive robotics, ASD}, publisherplace = {Edinburgh, Ujedinjeno Kraljevstvo} }
@article{article, author = {\v{S}imle\v{s}a, Sanja and Cepanec, Maja and Mikli\'{c}, Damjan and Petric, Frano and Kova\v{c}i\'{c}, Zdenko}, year = {2016}, pages = {1-1}, keywords = {Autism diagnostics, socially assistive robotics, ASD}, title = {Can humanoid robots be used in the assessement of autism spectrum disorder?}, keyword = {Autism diagnostics, socially assistive robotics, ASD}, publisherplace = {Edinburgh, Ujedinjeno Kraljevstvo} }




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