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Improving Collaborative Play Between Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders and Their Siblings: The Effectiveness of a Robot-Mediated Intervention Based on Lego® Therapy

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Abstract

The aim of the study was to investigate the effectiveness of a brief robot-mediated intervention based on Lego® therapy on improving collaborative behaviors (i.e., interaction initiations, responses, and play together) between children with ASD and their siblings during play sessions, in a therapeutic setting. A concurrent multiple baseline design across three child–sibling pairs was in effect. The robot-intervention resulted in no statistically significant changes in collaborative behaviors of the children with ASD. Despite limited effectiveness of the intervention, this study provides several practical implications and directions for future research.

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Acknowledgments

The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of the Innovation-Oriented Research Program ‘Integral Product Creation and Realization (IOP IPCR)’ of the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs, Agriculture and Innovation, The Hague. The authors thank the children and their parents for their participation. We also would like to thank Rianne Verschuur and Margreet Weide for their assistance during preparation and data collection. Finally, we would like to thank Terence Nelson for his assistance with the robot in the intervention sessions.

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Correspondence to Bibi Huskens.

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Huskens, B., Palmen, A., Van der Werff, M. et al. Improving Collaborative Play Between Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders and Their Siblings: The Effectiveness of a Robot-Mediated Intervention Based on Lego® Therapy. J Autism Dev Disord 45, 3746–3755 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10803-014-2326-0

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