4.4 Article

Does the Social Robot Nao Facilitate Cooperation in High Functioning Children with ASD?

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12369-023-01063-4

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Autism; Interpersonal coordination; Relative phase; Theory of mind

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This study designed a coordination-cooperation game to teach theory of mind to children with autism spectrum disorder. The results showed that children made the most progress in inferring others' intentions after interacting with a human.
We designed a coordination-cooperation game dedicated to teaching the theory of mind (ToM) to children with autism spectrum disorder. Children interacted with either a robot or a human. They had to coordinate their gestures with the beats of a ditty sung by their partner (coordination), who then implicitly asked them for help (cooperation). Before and after this cooperation-coordination task, the children performed a helping task that assessed their ToM skills: the ability to infer social partners' intentions. Despite the regularity and predictability of the robot, children made the most progress in the helping task after interacting with a human. Motor coupling was more stable in child-human than in child-robot dyads. The ability of the social partner to actively maintain a stable social coupling seems to be a primary factor inciting the child to learn and transfer the just-practiced social skills.

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