Toward emotional interactive videogames for children with autism spectrum disorder

被引:0
|
作者
Sandra Baldassarri
Liliana Passerino
Silvia Ramis
Inma Riquelme
Francisco J. Perales
机构
[1] Universidad de Zaragoza,Advanced Computer Graphics Group (GIGA), Computer Science Department, Engineering Research Institute of Aragon (I3A)
[2] Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS),Centro de Estudos Interdisciplinares em Novas Tecnologias da Educação
[3] Computer Graphics, Campus Centro. Av. Paulo Gama, 110 Anexo III
[4] Vision and Artificial Intelligence Group A. Turmeda, 3º andar
[5] Institut Universitari d’Investigació en Ciències de la Salut (IUNICS),Facultat d’Infermeria i Fisioteràpia
关键词
Videogames; Emotions; Tangible interaction; Serious games (SG); Autism spectrum disorder (ASD); Education and therapy; Interactive tools; Technologies platforms; Computer graphics;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Technology and videogames have been proven as motivating tools for working attention and complex communication skills, especially in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). In this work, we present two experiences that used interactive games for promoting communication and attention. The first game considers emotions in order to measure children’s attention, concentration and satisfaction, while the second uses tangible tabletops for fostering cognitive planning. The analysis of the results obtained allows to propose a new study integrating both, in which the tangible interactive game is complemented with the emotional trainer in a way that allows identifying and classifying children’s emotion with ASD when they collaborate to solve cognitively significant and contextualized challenges. The first application proposed is an emotional trainer application in which the child can work out the seven basic emotions (happiness, sadness, fear, disgust, anger, surprise and neutral). Further, a serious videogame is proposed: a 3D maze where the emotions can be captured. The second case study was carried out in a Special Education Center, where a set of activities for working cognitive planning was proposed. In this case, a tangible interactive tabletop was used to analyze, in students with ASD, how the communication processes with these interfaces affect to the attention, memory, successive and simultaneous processing that compose cognitive planning from the PASS model. The results of the first study, suggest that the autistic children did not act with previous planning, but they used their perception to adjust their actions a posteriori (that explains the higher number of collisions). On the second case study, the successive processing was not explored. The inclusion of the mazes of case study 1 to a semantic rich scenario could allow us to measure the prior planning and the emotions involved in the maze game. The new physiological sensors will also help to validate the emotions felt by the children. The first study has as objective the capability to imitate emotions and resolve a maze without semantic context. The second study organized all the actions from a semantic context close to users. The attention results presented by the second study are coherent with the first study and complement it showing that attention can be receptive or selective. In the first study case, the receptive attention was the focus of analysis. In the second case, both contributed to explain and understand how it can be developed from a videogame.
引用
收藏
页码:239 / 254
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Pharmacotherapy of emotional and behavioral symptoms associated with autism spectrum disorder in children and adolescents
    Stepanova, Ekaterina
    Dowling, Susannah
    Phelps, Molly
    Findling, Robert L.
    DIALOGUES IN CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2017, 19 (04) : 395 - +
  • [32] Emotional Dysregulation in Preschoolers with Autism Spectrum Disorder-A Sample of Romanian Children
    Costescu, Cristina
    Sogor, Malina
    Thill, Serge
    Rosan, Adrian
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 18 (20)
  • [33] Peer relationships, emotional and behavioral problems in siblings of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
    Caner, Nuray
    Efe, Yagmur Sezer
    Vural, Birgul
    Ertas, Elif Bilge
    CHILDREN AND YOUTH SERVICES REVIEW, 2024, 156
  • [34] Emotional and behavioural problems of children with autism spectrum disorder attending mainstream schools
    Hastings, Stephanie E.
    Hastings, Richard A.
    Swales, Michaela A.
    Hughes, J. Carl
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES, 2022, 68 (05) : 633 - 640
  • [35] Gaze Patterns in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder to Emotional Faces: Scanpath and Similarity
    Zhou, Wei
    Yang, Minqiang
    Tang, Jingsheng
    Wang, Juan
    Hu, Bin
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NEURAL SYSTEMS AND REHABILITATION ENGINEERING, 2024, 32 : 865 - 874
  • [36] Family Functioning and Emotional Aspects of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder in Southern Brazil
    Flenik, Tatiana M. N.
    Bara, Tiago S.
    Cordeiro, Mara L.
    JOURNAL OF AUTISM AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS, 2023, 53 (06) : 2306 - 2313
  • [37] Facial emotion recognition in children with autism spectrum disorder: Are emotional primes effective?
    Dogrul, Ata Cantuerk
    Tavat, Banu Cangoz
    Uran, Pinar
    KLINIK PSIKIYATRI DERGISI-TURKISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2024, 27 (02): : 139 - 149
  • [38] Modulation of attention by socio-emotional scenes in children with autism spectrum disorder
    Garcia-Blanco, Ana C.
    Yanez, Nuria
    Vazquez, Miguel A.
    Marcos, Inmaculada
    Perea, Manuel
    RESEARCH IN AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDERS, 2017, 33 : 39 - 46
  • [39] Risk Factors for Behavioral and Emotional Difficulties in Siblings of Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder
    Walton, Katherine M.
    AJIDD-AMERICAN JOURNAL ON INTELLECTUAL AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES, 2016, 121 (06): : 533 - 549
  • [40] Behavioral and emotional profile and parental stress in preschool children with autism spectrum disorder
    Giovagnoli, Giulia
    Postorino, Valentina
    Fatta, Laura M.
    Sanges, Veronica
    De Peppo, Lavinia
    Vassena, Lia
    De Rose, Paola
    Vicari, Stefano
    Mazzone, Luigi
    RESEARCH IN DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES, 2015, 45-46 : 411 - 421