From infancy to early childhood: the role of augmentative manipulation robotic tools in cognitive and social development for children with motor disabilities

L. Alvarez*, A. M. Rios, K. Adams, P. Encarnação, A. M. Cook

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    3 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Motor experience plays a critical role in cognitive and social development. Developmental research has identified the major role of motor experience through manipulation and locomotion on the cognitive development of typically developing children. Children with physically disabilities cannot independently explore the environment and manipulate objects, and their motor impairments limit their opportunities for developing cognitive and social skills. Assistive technologies can provide the means for children with disabilities to independently interact with their physical and social environments. Assistive robots can provide children with disabilities with opportunities for object manipulation. This paper describes research using robots to understand and promote cognitive and social development of children with physical disabilities.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationConverging clinical and engineering research on neurorehabilitation
    EditorsJosé L. Pons, Diego Torricelli, Marta Pajaro
    Place of PublicationBerlin
    PublisherSpringer International Publishing
    Pages905-909
    Number of pages5
    ISBN (Electronic)9783642345463
    ISBN (Print)9783642345456
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2013

    Publication series

    NameBiosystems and Biorobotics
    Volume1
    ISSN (Print)2195-3562
    ISSN (Electronic)2195-3570

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