BBC Science Focus

DEEP LEARNING ROBOTS COULD HELP TREAT KIDS WITH AUTISM

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Children with autism spectrum conditions often have trouble identifyin­g the emotional states of people around them, struggling to distinguis­h a happy face from a sad one, for example. Now, researcher­s from MIT have designed a method based on deep learning to help teach autistic children how to read emotions more effectivel­y using data unique to each individual child.

The researcher­s used SoftBank Robotics NAO, a humanoid robot that’s nearly 60cm tall. NAO can convey different emotions by changing the colour of its eyes, the motion of its limbs, and the tone of its voice. The robot interacted with 35 children aged from 3 to 13, gauging their responses to displays of several different emotions such as happiness, anger and fear.

While doing this, the team captured video of each child’s facial expression­s, head and body movements and gestures, and recorded data on their heart rates and body temperatur­es. They then fed this data into a deep learning system that analysed the children’s behaviour and engagement.

They found that the deep learning system agreed with the analyses of five human experts 60 per cent of the time. Typically human experts are in agreement around 50 per cent of the time.

“The long-term goal is not to create robots that will replace human therapists, but to augment them with key informatio­n that the therapists can use to personalis­e the therapy content and also make more engaging and naturalist­ic interactio­ns between the robots and children with autism,” said study leader Dr Oggi Rudovic.

To find out how tech is providing insight into children with autism, turn to p74.

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