Without speech, we can have great difficulty communicating wants, emotions, needs, and interacting with society at large. During typical child development, an infant acquires language skills without explicit teaching. However, some children, including those with Autistic Spectrum Disorder (ASD) have explicit difficulty developing these skills in the context of everyday interactions. HCI is situated to help by developing technology and techniques to teach speech and language skills to children with ASD through the use of visual and auditory feedback. This paper examines preliminary results from a study, as well as describes new directions of research.
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Other PublicationsYears:
2008Authors (Alphabetical):
Jim Halle, Joshua Hailpern, Karrie Karahalios, Laura DeThorne, Mary-Kelsey ColettoPublication Venues:
Extended Abstracts of CHILocations:
University of Illinois at Urbana ChampaignLinks & Downloads
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