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Paul Herring, Kieron Sheehy, Roger Jones and Karen Kear 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium Digital Asia: Language, Technology & Community 2010 Designing a virtual teacher for non-verbal children with autism: Pedagogical affordances and the influence of teacher voice.
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Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

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Paul Herring

Designing a virtual teacher for non-verbal children with autism: Pedagogical affordances and the influence of teacher voice. Presentation given to the 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium Digital Asia: Language, Technology & Community
2010
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Page 1: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

Paul Herring, Kieron Sheehy, Roger Jones and Karen Kear

4th International Wireless Ready SymposiumDigital Asia: Language, Technology & Community

2010

Designing a virtual teacher for non-verbal children with

autism: Pedagogical affordances and the

influence of teacher voice.

Page 2: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

2

Children with Autism

qualitative impairment in social interaction, qualitative impairments in communication delay in, or total lack of, the development of spoken language

restricted repetitive and stereotyped patterns of behaviour, interests and activities

Eighty per cent will have profound or severe learning difficulties.Within this group, approximately one-third to one-half of these children will lack functional speech (Mirenda 2003)

Page 3: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

Pedagogies and Approaches

3

Behavioural: Applied Behaviour Analysis, Lovaas, SCAmp Environmental: TEACCH, Daily Life Therapy

Social Interaction: Intensive Interaction,

Technological: virtual worlds (Bignell, 2008) and socially intelligent agents (Dautenhahn and Werry, 2004).

Page 4: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

The Picture Exchange Communications System

4

An augmentative & alternative communication (AAC) approach For children with little or no speech to develop language and communication skills.

Exchanging pictures and symbols for desired items or outcomes.

There is empirical evidence to support the value of this approach (Preston and Carter, 2009).

Page 5: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

New technologies and new teacher embodiment (Sheehy, 2010)Virtual and augmented. Degrees of artificial intelligence

Page 6: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

Computer Assisted Picture Exchange (CAPE).

• Non-verbal children • Bridging virtual and real spaces• Utilising PECS pedagogy• Developmental iterative research approach.• based on the Center of Spoken Language

Understanding toolkit (University of Oregon) , Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) enabled input and BoardMaker symbols (Mayer-Johnson LLC).

Page 7: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

The question of ‘voice’• Williams (2004) - Computer Assisted Learning

(CAL) to support reading for children with autism.

• children found the voices they used ‘too synthetic’, however this aspect was not subsequently explored further.

• This implies an apparent mismatch between preference for particular (non-human) appearance and the associated voice.

• This study looked at Natural voice vs. synthetic voice distinction, in the context of CAPE.

Page 8: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

Task 1: Help Super Monkey?The child

sees three foods and one drink item

is advised that the virtual tutor’s friend, Super Monkey had not eaten today

asked to choose a food or drink item for Super Monkey from the symbols provided

Page 9: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

Help Super Monkey The child • affixes the symbol to the

communication board and the RFID reader

• Symbol selection is confirmed by the virtual tutor and a digital representation on- screen

• Super Monkey consumes the food or drink.

Page 10: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

Would you like to continue?

Page 11: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

Task 3: Verbal Request only

Page 12: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

Experimental design

• Related, two condition, counterbalanced design.• Eight participants, with a formal diagnosis of

autism, 7-10 years, who use a maximum of one word utterance.

• virtual teacher spoke with either a female human voice or synthetic generated voice.

• The two teaching sessions of ten minute duration were spaced across four days

• Quantitative and qualitative data was collected.

Page 13: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

Quantitative measures• How many symbols were selected\selected

appropriately?• The total time spent looking at the computer

screen and the symbols.• The total time spent looking at the teacher in

the room.• The average speed of response to the virtual

teachers requests.• The average speed of response to verbal

requests from the virtual tutor that with and without a visual prompt.

Page 14: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

Coding using fOCUS III software

Page 15: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

• No significant differences between natural vs. synthetic conditions on any measure.

• However, significant differences were noted in the overall comparisons for Auditory and visual cue vs. Auditory cue task. [natural voice]

• Supports the use of visual symbols approach with

this group of children?

Page 16: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

Qualitative observational data

• The initial verbal greeting by the virtual tutor of “hello” and animation of Super Monkey.

• Modelling of initial symbol selection• Participant 2 and avatar eye contact aversion vs.

others engagement.• Children had different interests • Teacher interviews re natural vs synthetic.

Page 17: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

Conclusions

• Pilot study raise many aspects for further research and development.

• Joint attention• Eye contact and screen analysis.• Developing the pedagogy • Teacher attitudes

Page 18: Sheehy Et Al 4th International Wireless Ready Symposium (1)

References• Bignell, s. (2008) Social communication skills of people diagnosed with

autism in 3D multi- user virtual worlds. Realive08 Milton Keynes, England. • Dautenhahn, K. & Werry I. (2004) Towards Interactive Robots in Autism

Therapy: Background, Motivation and Challenges. Pragmatics and Cognition 12(1), pp. 1-35.

• Mirenda, P. (2003) Toward functional augmentative and alternative communication for students with autism: Manual signs, graphic symbols Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools 34 , 2, 203

• Preston, D. & Carter, M. 2009 A Review of the Efficacy of the Picture Exchange Communication System Intervention Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders 39, 10, 1471-1486

• Sheehy, K. (2010). Inclusive education and virtual worlds: The Teacher Embodiment And LEarning Affordance Framework (TEALEAF). In Virtual Worlds: Controversies at the Frontier of Education. Nova Science Publishers

• Williams, C. Wright, B. Callaghan, G. Coughlan, B. (2002). "Do children with autism learn to read more readily by computer assisted instruction or traditional book methods? A pilot study." Autism 6(1): 71-91.