Gaze Behavior During a Long-Term, In-Home, Social Robot Intervention for Children with ASD
Journal:
arXiv
Published Date:
Jan 5, 2025
Abstract
Atypical gaze behavior is a diagnostic hallmark of Autism Spectrum Disorder
(ASD), playing a substantial role in the social and communicative challenges
that individuals with ASD face. This study explores the impacts of a
month-long, in-home intervention designed to promote triadic interactions
between a social robot, a child with ASD, and their caregiver. Our results
indicate that the intervention successfully promoted appropriate gaze behavior,
encouraging children with ASD to follow the robot's gaze, resulting in more
frequent and prolonged instances of spontaneous eye contact and joint attention
with their caregivers. Additionally, we observed specific timelines for
behavioral variability and novelty effects among users. Furthermore, diagnostic
measures for ASD emerged as strong predictors of gaze patterns for both
caregivers and children. These results deepen our understanding of ASD gaze
patterns and highlight the potential for clinical relevance of robot-assisted
interventions.