Adherence and acceptability of a robot-assisted Pivotal Response Treatment protocol for children with autism spectrum disorder

被引:0
|
作者
Iris van den Berk-Smeekens
Martine van Dongen-Boomsma
Manon W. P. De Korte
Jenny C. Den Boer
Iris J. Oosterling
Nienke C. Peters-Scheffer
Jan K. Buitelaar
Emilia I. Barakova
Tino Lourens
Wouter G. Staal
Jeffrey C. Glennon
机构
[1] Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre,Department of Cognitive Neuroscience, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour
[2] P.O. Box 9104,Behavioural Science Institute
[3] Karakter Child and Adolescent Psychiatry University Centre,Faculty of Industrial Design
[4] Karakter Child and Adolescent Psychiatry,Institute for Brian and Cognition
[5] Radboud University Nijmegen,undefined
[6] PO Box 9104,undefined
[7] Driestroom,undefined
[8] PO box 139,undefined
[9] University of Technology,undefined
[10] Eindhoven,undefined
[11] TiViPE,undefined
[12] Kanaaldijk ZW 11,undefined
[13] Leiden University,undefined
[14] P.O. Box 9600 (C2-S),undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The aim of this study is to present a robot-assisted therapy protocol for children with ASD based on the current state-of-the-art in both ASD intervention research and robotics research, and critically evaluate its adherence and acceptability based on child as well as parent ratings. The robot-assisted therapy was designed based on motivational components of Pivotal Response Treatment (PRT), a highly promising and feasible intervention focused at training “pivotal” (key) areas such as motivation for social interaction and self-initiations, with the goal of establishing collateral gains in untargeted areas of functioning and development, affected by autism spectrum disorders. Overall, children (3–8 y) could adhere to the robot-assisted therapy protocol (Mean percentage of treatment adherence 85.5%), showed positive affect ratings after therapy sessions (positive in 86.6% of sessions) and high robot likability scores (high in 79.4% of sessions). Positive likability ratings were mainly given by school-aged children (H(1) = 7.91, p = .005) and related to the movements, speech and game scenarios of the robot. Parent ratings on the added value of the robot were mainly positive (Mean of 84.8 on 0–100 scale), while lower parent ratings were related to inflexibility of robot behaviour.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] A low-cost socially assistive robot and robot-assisted intervention for children with autism spectrum disorder: field trials and lessons learned
    Boccanfuso, Laura
    Scarborough, Sarah
    Abramson, Ruth K.
    Hall, Alicia V.
    Wright, Harry H.
    O'Kane, Jason M.
    AUTONOMOUS ROBOTS, 2017, 41 (03) : 637 - 655
  • [42] Effects of pivotal response treatment on reciprocal vocal contingency in a randomized controlled trial of children with autism spectrum disorder
    McDaniel, Jena
    Yoder, Paul
    Crandall, Madison
    Millan, Maria Estefania
    Ardel, Christina Mich
    Gengoux, Grace W.
    Hardan, Antonio Y.
    AUTISM, 2020, 24 (06) : 1566 - 1571
  • [43] Pivotal Response Treatment for School-Aged Children and Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Randomized Controlled Trial
    de Korte, Manon W. P.
    van den Berk-smeekens, Iris
    Buitelaar, Jan. K.
    Staal, Wouter G.
    van Dongen-Boomsma, Martine
    JOURNAL OF AUTISM AND DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS, 2021, 51 (12) : 4506 - 4519
  • [44] Pivotal Response Treatment (PRT) parent group training for young children with autism spectrum disorder: a pilot study
    de Korte, Manon W. P.
    van Dongen-Boomsma, Martine
    Oosterling, Iris J.
    Buitelaar, Jan K.
    Staal, Wouter G.
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2022, 12 (01)
  • [45] Pivotal Response Treatment for School-Aged Children and Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Randomized Controlled Trial
    Manon W. P. de Korte
    Iris van den Berk-Smeekens
    Jan. K. Buitelaar
    Wouter G. Staal
    Martine van Dongen-Boomsma
    Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2021, 51 : 4506 - 4519
  • [46] Pivotal Response Treatment (PRT) parent group training for young children with autism spectrum disorder: a pilot study
    Manon W. P. de Korte
    Martine van Dongen‑Boomsma
    Iris J. Oosterling
    Jan. K. Buitelaar
    Wouter G. Staal
    Scientific Reports, 12
  • [47] Functional Imitation Task in the Context of Robot-assisted Autism Spectrum Disorder Diagnostics: Preliminary Investigations
    Petric, Frano
    Miklic, Damjan
    Cepanec, Maja
    Cvitanovic, Petra
    Kovacic, Zdenko
    2017 26TH IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON ROBOT AND HUMAN INTERACTIVE COMMUNICATION (RO-MAN), 2017, : 1471 - 1478
  • [48] Design Framework of Robot-assisted Therapy for Children with Autism
    Kim, Min-Gyu
    2017 INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON MICRO-NANOMECHATRONICS AND HUMAN SCIENCE (MHS), 2017,
  • [49] Protocol for optimizing robot-assisted autism therapy sessions through gaze analysis: A pilot study investigating optimal trial count for children with comorbid autism spectrum disorder and intellectual disability
    Zahid, Zunera
    Ali, Sara
    Ayaz, Yasar
    Hassan, Syed Mustafa
    Nawaz, Raheel
    JOURNAL OF INTELLECTUAL DISABILITIES, 2025,
  • [50] Adherence to Treatment in a Behavioral Intervention Curriculum for Parents of Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder
    Moore, Timothy R.
    Symons, Frank J.
    BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION, 2011, 35 (06) : 570 - 594