2018 |
Ishak, N Saya; Yusof, H M; Sidek, S N; Jaalan, DENGAN Platform robotik interaktif untuk pendidikan dan pemulihan kemahiran bahasa Persidangan 2017-2020 November , Institut Jurutera Elektrik dan Elektronik Inc., 2018, ISBN: 9781538639603, (dipetik oleh 0). Abstrak | Pautan | BibTeX | Tag: Autisme, Gangguan Spektrum Autisme, Kanak-kanak Autistik, Kanak-kanak dengan Autisme, Kemahiran komunikasi, Penyakit, Pergerakan Mata, Ekspresi wajah, Pengawal Tahap Tinggi, Interaksi Robot Manusia, Robotik Interaktif, Reka Bentuk Mesin, Pemulihan Pesakit, Robotik @ persidangan{Ishak20181, tajuk = {Platform robotik interaktif untuk pendidikan dan pemulihan kemahiran bahasa}, pengarang = {N I Ishak dan H M Yusof dan S N Sidek dan Z Jaalan}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85050632534&doi = 10.1109% 2fICSIMA.2017.8312031&rakan kongsi = 40&md5=d2a223b2a4623560320389638990a308}, doi = {10.1109/ICSIMA.2017.8312031}, isbn = {9781538639603}, tahun = {2018}, tarikh = {2018-01-01}, jurnal = {2017 Persidangan Antarabangsa IEEE mengenai Instrumentasi Pintar, Pengukuran dan Aplikasi, ICSIMA 2017}, isi padu = {2017-2020 November}, halaman = {1-5}, penerbit = {Institut Jurutera Elektrik dan Elektronik Inc.}, abstrak = {Dalam kertas ini, kami mempersembahkan mekanisme dan reka bentuk sistem robot yang sesuai untuk proses pemulihan kanak-kanak autisme. Melalui beberapa kajian, robot nampaknya mempunyai keupayaan untuk meningkatkan kemahiran komunikasi kanak-kanak autisme. Platform robotik interaktif telah dibangunkan dengan mengambil kira penampilan dan ciri robot untuk menggalakkan hasil positif dalam pemulihan gangguan spektrum autisme (ASD) kanak-kanak. Interaksi antara robot dan kanak-kanak itu termasuk kemahiran bahasa, hubungan mata, tingkah laku meniru, ekspresi muka dan pergerakan robot. Di sini, pengawal peringkat tinggi disepadukan ke sistem untuk membantu ahli terapi memantau tindak balas kanak-kanak terhadap robot. Hasilnya, robot yang dibangunkan mempunyai keupayaan untuk membantu ahli terapi untuk mendiagnosis dan menamatkan sesi terapi dalam tempoh yang lebih singkat. © 2017 IEEE.}, nota = {dipetik oleh 0}, kata kunci = {Autisme, Gangguan Spektrum Autisme, Kanak-kanak Autistik, Kanak-kanak dengan Autisme, Kemahiran komunikasi, Penyakit, Pergerakan Mata, Ekspresi wajah, Pengawal Tahap Tinggi, Interaksi Robot Manusia, Robotik Interaktif, Reka Bentuk Mesin, Pemulihan Pesakit, Robotik}, pubstate = {diterbitkan}, tppubtype = {persidangan} } Dalam kertas ini, kami mempersembahkan mekanisme dan reka bentuk sistem robot yang sesuai untuk proses pemulihan kanak-kanak autisme. Melalui beberapa kajian, robot nampaknya mempunyai keupayaan untuk meningkatkan kemahiran komunikasi kanak-kanak autisme. Platform robotik interaktif telah dibangunkan dengan mengambil kira penampilan dan ciri robot untuk menggalakkan hasil positif dalam pemulihan gangguan spektrum autisme (ASD) kanak-kanak. Interaksi antara robot dan kanak-kanak itu termasuk kemahiran bahasa, hubungan mata, tingkah laku meniru, ekspresi muka dan pergerakan robot. Di sini, pengawal peringkat tinggi disepadukan ke sistem untuk membantu ahli terapi memantau tindak balas kanak-kanak terhadap robot. Hasilnya, robot yang dibangunkan mempunyai keupayaan untuk membantu ahli terapi untuk mendiagnosis dan menamatkan sesi terapi dalam tempoh yang lebih singkat. © 2017 IEEE. |
2014 |
Cassidy, S; Panggil, D; Mitchell, P; Kapten, P Can adults with autism spectrum disorders infer what happened to someone from their emotional response? Artikel Jurnal Penyelidikan Autisme, 7 (1), hlm. 112-123, 2014, ISSN: 19393792, (dipetik oleh 21). Abstrak | Pautan | BibTeX | Tag: Ketepatan, Dewasa, Aged, Artikel, Sindrom Asperger, Perhatian, Autisme, Kelakuan, Cacao, Gangguan Perkembangan Kanak-kanak, Artikel Klinikal, Concept Formation, Kajian Terkawal, Deception, Discrimination (Psikologi), Emosi, Pergerakan Mata, Eye Tracking, Face Processing, Ekspresi wajah, Perempuan, Manusia, Interpersonal Relations, Lelaki, Pertengahan umur, Money, Meresap, Jurnal Keutamaan, Recipient, Recognition, Reference Values, Retrodictive Mindreading, Spontaneous Emotion Recognition, Theory of Mind, Video Recording, Dewasa Muda @artikel{Cassidy2014112, tajuk = {Can adults with autism spectrum disorders infer what happened to someone from their emotional response?}, pengarang = {S Cassidy and D Ropar and P Mitchell and P Chapman}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84894307909&doi=10.1002%2faur.1351&rakan kongsi = 40&md5=8c6736bc006e9eebde29427879d023c3}, doi = {10.1002/aur.1351}, terbitan = {19393792}, tahun = {2014}, tarikh = {2014-01-01}, jurnal = {Penyelidikan Autisme}, isi padu = {7}, nombor = {1}, halaman = {112-123}, penerbit = {John Wiley and Sons Inc.}, abstrak = {Can adults with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) infer what happened to someone from their emotional response? Millikan has argued that in everyday life, others' emotions are most commonly used to work out the antecedents of behavior, an ability termed retrodictive mindreading. As those with ASD show difficulties interpreting others' emotions, we predicted that these individuals would have difficulty with retrodictive mindreading. Sixteen adults with high-functioning autism or Asperger's syndrome and 19 typically developing adults viewed 21 video clips of people reacting to one of three gifts (chocolate, monopoly money, or a homemade novelty) and then inferred what gift the recipient received and the emotion expressed by that person. Participants' eye movements were recorded while they viewed the videos. Results showed that participants with ASD were only less accurate when inferring who received a chocolate or homemade gift. This difficulty was not due to lack of understanding what emotions were appropriate in response to each gift, as both groups gave consistent gift and emotion inferences significantly above chance (genuine positive for chocolate and feigned positive for homemade). Those with ASD did not look significantly less to the eyes of faces in the videos, and looking to the eyes did not correlate with accuracy on the task. These results suggest that those with ASD are less accurate when retrodicting events involving recognition of genuine and feigned positive emotions, and challenge claims that lack of attention to the eyes causes emotion recognition difficulties in ASD. Autism Res 2014, 7: 112-123. © 2013 International Society for Autism Research, Berkala Wiley, Inc.}, nota = {dipetik oleh 21}, kata kunci = {Ketepatan, Dewasa, Aged, Artikel, Sindrom Asperger, Perhatian, Autisme, Kelakuan, Cacao, Gangguan Perkembangan Kanak-kanak, Artikel Klinikal, Concept Formation, Kajian Terkawal, Deception, Discrimination (Psikologi), Emosi, Pergerakan Mata, Eye Tracking, Face Processing, Ekspresi wajah, Perempuan, Manusia, Interpersonal Relations, Lelaki, Pertengahan umur, Money, Meresap, Jurnal Keutamaan, Recipient, Recognition, Reference Values, Retrodictive Mindreading, Spontaneous Emotion Recognition, Theory of Mind, Video Recording, Dewasa Muda}, pubstate = {diterbitkan}, tppubtype = {artikel} } Can adults with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) infer what happened to someone from their emotional response? Millikan has argued that in everyday life, others' emotions are most commonly used to work out the antecedents of behavior, an ability termed retrodictive mindreading. As those with ASD show difficulties interpreting others' emotions, we predicted that these individuals would have difficulty with retrodictive mindreading. Sixteen adults with high-functioning autism or Asperger's syndrome and 19 typically developing adults viewed 21 video clips of people reacting to one of three gifts (chocolate, monopoly money, or a homemade novelty) and then inferred what gift the recipient received and the emotion expressed by that person. Participants' eye movements were recorded while they viewed the videos. Results showed that participants with ASD were only less accurate when inferring who received a chocolate or homemade gift. This difficulty was not due to lack of understanding what emotions were appropriate in response to each gift, as both groups gave consistent gift and emotion inferences significantly above chance (genuine positive for chocolate and feigned positive for homemade). Those with ASD did not look significantly less to the eyes of faces in the videos, and looking to the eyes did not correlate with accuracy on the task. These results suggest that those with ASD are less accurate when retrodicting events involving recognition of genuine and feigned positive emotions, and challenge claims that lack of attention to the eyes causes emotion recognition difficulties in ASD. Autism Res 2014, 7: 112-123. © 2013 International Society for Autism Research, Berkala Wiley, Syarikat. |
Pillai, D; Sheppard, E; Panggil, D; Marsh, L; Pearson, A; Mitchell, P Using other minds as a window onto the world: Guessing what happened from clues in behaviour Artikel Jurnal Jurnal Autisme dan Gangguan Perkembangan, 44 (10), hlm. 2430-2439, 2014, ISSN: 01623257, (dipetik oleh 17). Abstrak | Pautan | BibTeX | Tag: Remaja, Dewasa, Artikel, Autisme, Gangguan Perkembangan Kanak-kanak, Anak-anak, Artikel Klinikal, Kognisi, Kajian Terkawal, Pergerakan Mata, Eye Tracking, Ekspresi wajah, Gaze, Manusia, Intelligence Quotient, Lelaki, Measurement Accuracy, Mouth, Patofisiologi, Meresap, Fisiologi, Aspek Psikologi, Psikologi, Retrodiction, Task Performance, Theory of Mind, Komunikasi Lisan, Video Recording, Videotape Recording, Dewasa Muda @artikel{Pillai20142430, tajuk = {Using other minds as a window onto the world: Guessing what happened from clues in behaviour}, pengarang = {D Pillai and E Sheppard and D Ropar and L Marsh and A Pearson and P Mitchell}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84912053354&doi=10.1007%2fs10803-014-2106-x&rakan kongsi = 40&md5=c3396f6f468e37e253c657f998993859}, doi = {10.1007/s10803-014-2106-x}, terbitan = {01623257}, tahun = {2014}, tarikh = {2014-01-01}, jurnal = {Jurnal Autisme dan Gangguan Perkembangan}, isi padu = {44}, nombor = {10}, halaman = {2430-2439}, penerbit = {Springer New York LLC}, abstrak = {It has been proposed that mentalising involves retrodicting as well as predicting behaviour, by inferring previous mental states of a target. This study investigated whether retrodiction is impaired in individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Participants watched videos of real people reacting to the researcher behaving in one of four possible ways. Their task was to decide which of these four ‘‘scenarios’’ each person responded to. Participants’ eye movements were recorded. Participants with ASD were poorer than comparison participants at identifying the scenario to which people in the videos were responding. There were no group differences in time spent looking at the eyes or mouth. The findings imply those with ASD are impaired in using mentalising skills for retrodiction. © Springer Science+Business Media New York 2014.}, nota = {dipetik oleh 17}, kata kunci = {Remaja, Dewasa, Artikel, Autisme, Gangguan Perkembangan Kanak-kanak, Anak-anak, Artikel Klinikal, Kognisi, Kajian Terkawal, Pergerakan Mata, Eye Tracking, Ekspresi wajah, Gaze, Manusia, Intelligence Quotient, Lelaki, Measurement Accuracy, Mouth, Patofisiologi, Meresap, Fisiologi, Aspek Psikologi, Psikologi, Retrodiction, Task Performance, Theory of Mind, Komunikasi Lisan, Video Recording, Videotape Recording, Dewasa Muda}, pubstate = {diterbitkan}, tppubtype = {artikel} } It has been proposed that mentalising involves retrodicting as well as predicting behaviour, by inferring previous mental states of a target. This study investigated whether retrodiction is impaired in individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Participants watched videos of real people reacting to the researcher behaving in one of four possible ways. Their task was to decide which of these four ‘‘scenarios’’ each person responded to. Participants’ eye movements were recorded. Participants with ASD were poorer than comparison participants at identifying the scenario to which people in the videos were responding. There were no group differences in time spent looking at the eyes or mouth. The findings imply those with ASD are impaired in using mentalising skills for retrodiction. © Springer Science+Business Media New York 2014. |
2011 |
Freeth, M; Panggil, D; Mitchell, P; Kapten, P; Loher, S Jurnal Autisme dan Gangguan Perkembangan, 41 (3), hlm. 364-371, 2011, ISSN: 01623257, (dipetik oleh 21). Abstrak | Pautan | BibTeX | Tag: Remaja, Artikel, Association, Perhatian, Autisme, Gangguan Perkembangan Kanak-kanak, Anak-anak, Artikel Klinikal, Kajian Terkawal, Cues, Emosi, Eye Fixation, Pergerakan Mata, Eye Tracking, Perempuan, Gaze, Manusia, Intelligence Quotient, Lelaki, Mental Function, Kesihatan mental, Persepsi, Meresap, Photic Stimulation, Photostimulation, Jurnal Keutamaan, Aspek Psikologi, Budak sekolah, Aspek Sosial, Social Perception, Stimulus Response, Komunikasi Lisan, Penglihatan, Persepsi Visual, Visual Stimulation @artikel{Freeth2011364, tajuk = {Brief report: How adolescents with ASD process social information in complex scenes. Combining evidence from eye movements and verbal descriptions}, pengarang = {M Freeth and D Ropar and P Mitchell and P Chapman and S Loher}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79956006659&doi=10.1007%2fs10803-010-1053-4&rakan kongsi = 40&md5=35b5c8dd813f7eab2963b27081f11e78}, doi = {10.1007/s10803-010-1053-4}, terbitan = {01623257}, tahun = {2011}, tarikh = {2011-01-01}, jurnal = {Jurnal Autisme dan Gangguan Perkembangan}, isi padu = {41}, nombor = {3}, halaman = {364-371}, abstrak = {We investigated attention, encoding and processing of social aspects of complex photographic scenes. Twenty-four high-functioning adolescents (berumur 11-16) with ASD and 24 typically developing matched control participants viewed and then described a series of scenes, each containing a person. Analyses of eye movements and verbal descriptions provided converging evidence that both groups displayed general interest in the person in each scene but the salience of the person was reduced for the ASD participants. Namun begitu, the verbal descriptions revealed that participants with ASD frequently processed the observed person's emotion or mental state without prompting. They also often mentioned eye-gaze direction, and there was evidence from eye movements and verbal descriptions that gaze was followed accurately. The combination of evidence from eye movements and verbal descriptions provides a rich insight into the way stimuli are processed overall. The merits of using these methods within the same paradigm are discussed. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2010.}, nota = {dipetik oleh 21}, kata kunci = {Remaja, Artikel, Association, Perhatian, Autisme, Gangguan Perkembangan Kanak-kanak, Anak-anak, Artikel Klinikal, Kajian Terkawal, Cues, Emosi, Eye Fixation, Pergerakan Mata, Eye Tracking, Perempuan, Gaze, Manusia, Intelligence Quotient, Lelaki, Mental Function, Kesihatan mental, Persepsi, Meresap, Photic Stimulation, Photostimulation, Jurnal Keutamaan, Aspek Psikologi, Budak sekolah, Aspek Sosial, Social Perception, Stimulus Response, Komunikasi Lisan, Penglihatan, Persepsi Visual, Visual Stimulation}, pubstate = {diterbitkan}, tppubtype = {artikel} } We investigated attention, encoding and processing of social aspects of complex photographic scenes. Twenty-four high-functioning adolescents (berumur 11-16) with ASD and 24 typically developing matched control participants viewed and then described a series of scenes, each containing a person. Analyses of eye movements and verbal descriptions provided converging evidence that both groups displayed general interest in the person in each scene but the salience of the person was reduced for the ASD participants. Namun begitu, the verbal descriptions revealed that participants with ASD frequently processed the observed person's emotion or mental state without prompting. They also often mentioned eye-gaze direction, and there was evidence from eye movements and verbal descriptions that gaze was followed accurately. The combination of evidence from eye movements and verbal descriptions provides a rich insight into the way stimuli are processed overall. The merits of using these methods within the same paradigm are discussed. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2010. |
Ujianadminnaacuitm2020-05-28T06:49:14+00:00
2018 |
Platform robotik interaktif untuk pendidikan dan pemulihan kemahiran bahasa Persidangan 2017-2020 November , Institut Jurutera Elektrik dan Elektronik Inc., 2018, ISBN: 9781538639603, (dipetik oleh 0). |
2014 |
Can adults with autism spectrum disorders infer what happened to someone from their emotional response? Artikel Jurnal Penyelidikan Autisme, 7 (1), hlm. 112-123, 2014, ISSN: 19393792, (dipetik oleh 21). |
Using other minds as a window onto the world: Guessing what happened from clues in behaviour Artikel Jurnal Jurnal Autisme dan Gangguan Perkembangan, 44 (10), hlm. 2430-2439, 2014, ISSN: 01623257, (dipetik oleh 17). |
2011 |
Jurnal Autisme dan Gangguan Perkembangan, 41 (3), hlm. 364-371, 2011, ISSN: 01623257, (dipetik oleh 21). |