Abstract |
Research shows a reduced playfulness in children with developmental disabilities. This is a barrier for participation and children's health and wellbeing. IROMEC is a purposely designed robot to support play in impaired children. The reported study evaluates short-term effects of the IROMEC robot toy supporting play in an occupational therapy intervention for children with developmental disabilities. Two types of play intervention (standard occupational therapy versus robot-facilitated play intervention) were compared regarding their effect on the level of playfulness, on children's general functional development, goal achievement as well as the therapist's evaluation of the added value of a robot-facilitated play intervention. Three young children took part in this single-subject design study. Evaluation was performed through Test of Playfulness (ToP), the IROMEC evaluation questionnaire and qualitative evaluation by the therapists. Results confirmed the IROMEC robot did partly meet the needs of the children and therapists, and positive impact on TOP results was found with two children. This suggests robotic toys can support children with developmental disabilities in enriching play. Long term effect evaluation should verify these positive indications resulting from use of this innovative social robot for children with developmental disabilities. But it also became clear further development of the robot is required.
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Authors | Tanja Klein, Gert Jan Gelderblom, Luc de Witte, Silvie Vanstipelen |
Journal | IEEE ... International Conference on Rehabilitation Robotics : [proceedings]
(IEEE Int Conf Rehabil Robot)
Vol. 2011
Pg. 5975406
( 2011)
ISSN: 1945-7901 [Electronic] United States |
PMID | 22275609
(Publication Type: Clinical Trial, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
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Copyright | © 2011 IEEE |
Topics |
- Child, Preschool
- Developmental Disabilities
(rehabilitation)
- Humans
- Play and Playthings
- Robotics
(instrumentation, methods)
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