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Motivating children's initiations with novelty and surprise: initial design recommendations for autism

Published:17 June 2014Publication History

ABSTRACT

Data from the ECHOES virtual environment (VE) suggests that young children with autism spectrum conditions (ASC) may be motivated to initiate repeatedly and positively about novelty and expectationviolations (i.e. discrepancies) in a VE. This is of interest because initiating communication is developmentally important but difficult to encourageit must be unprompted in order to "count". Also, the ASC literature would predict that discrepancies should be distressing, not motivating. Based on this unexpected but positive finding, we are exploring the possibility of embedding discrepancies into VEs to support children's initiation practice. As a first step, we propose 6 empiricallyderived design principles for including discrepancies as motivators, while still maintaining the VE's overall integrity.

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  1. Motivating children's initiations with novelty and surprise: initial design recommendations for autism

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              cover image ACM Conferences
              IDC '14: Proceedings of the 2014 conference on Interaction design and children
              June 2014
              378 pages
              ISBN:9781450322720
              DOI:10.1145/2593968

              Copyright © 2014 ACM

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              Association for Computing Machinery

              New York, NY, United States

              Publication History

              • Published: 17 June 2014

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              IDC '14 Paper Acceptance Rate18of60submissions,30%Overall Acceptance Rate172of578submissions,30%

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