Innovative technologies for autism: critical reflections on digital bubbles
Innovative technologies for autism: critical reflections on digital bubbles
Purpose: there is increasing interest from researchers, teachers and other professionals, individuals with autism, and families about the potential for innovative technologies to transform learning experiences and facilitate friendships and social networks. Media accounts have highlighted both the apparently miraculous impacts of technology on supporting communication and learning for people with autism, as well as significant concerns about whether technology use is healthy, safe and socially appropriate for children and young people. Rarely, however, is any evidence reported to support either set of claims. The paper aims to discuss these issues.
Design/methodology/approach: this short paper reports on an Economic and Social Research Council-funded seminar series in the UK that is critically reviewing and discussing the field with respect to the research evidence base but also the assumptions that are made about where, how and whether innovative technologies may be useful for people with autism and their families.
Findings: the first seminar in the series focused on whether technologies create a social bubble for people with autism and presented research demonstrating that technology use can be positive, supportive and rewarding.
Originality/value: this paper offers an up-to-date insight into some of key debates about the benefits and limitations of social technologies for people with autism. Its value lies in raising questions about, and discussing evidence that challenges, some of the negative assumptions that are often perpetuated by the media about the potentially harmful effects of technologie
116-121
Parsons, Sarah
5af3382f-cda3-489c-a336-9604f3c04d7d
Yuill, Nicola
283a73fb-b03e-4185-9acd-85fdc7992743
Brosnan, Mark
752fa25f-332e-47d4-9f9f-76862509e2cb
Good, Judith
3955a47e-da9e-414d-9f85-971386208259
June 2015
Parsons, Sarah
5af3382f-cda3-489c-a336-9604f3c04d7d
Yuill, Nicola
283a73fb-b03e-4185-9acd-85fdc7992743
Brosnan, Mark
752fa25f-332e-47d4-9f9f-76862509e2cb
Good, Judith
3955a47e-da9e-414d-9f85-971386208259
Parsons, Sarah, Yuill, Nicola, Brosnan, Mark and Good, Judith
(2015)
Innovative technologies for autism: critical reflections on digital bubbles.
Journal of Assistive Technologies, 9 (2), .
(doi:10.1108/JAT-03-2015-0005).
Abstract
Purpose: there is increasing interest from researchers, teachers and other professionals, individuals with autism, and families about the potential for innovative technologies to transform learning experiences and facilitate friendships and social networks. Media accounts have highlighted both the apparently miraculous impacts of technology on supporting communication and learning for people with autism, as well as significant concerns about whether technology use is healthy, safe and socially appropriate for children and young people. Rarely, however, is any evidence reported to support either set of claims. The paper aims to discuss these issues.
Design/methodology/approach: this short paper reports on an Economic and Social Research Council-funded seminar series in the UK that is critically reviewing and discussing the field with respect to the research evidence base but also the assumptions that are made about where, how and whether innovative technologies may be useful for people with autism and their families.
Findings: the first seminar in the series focused on whether technologies create a social bubble for people with autism and presented research demonstrating that technology use can be positive, supportive and rewarding.
Originality/value: this paper offers an up-to-date insight into some of key debates about the benefits and limitations of social technologies for people with autism. Its value lies in raising questions about, and discussing evidence that challenges, some of the negative assumptions that are often perpetuated by the media about the potentially harmful effects of technologie
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Parsons et al (2015) Innovative technologies JAT.pdf
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 March 2015
Published date: June 2015
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 378419
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378419
PURE UUID: dc4940d3-ba53-46fb-91db-f59ce6f0fbe9
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Date deposited: 02 Jul 2015 11:17
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:38
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Author:
Nicola Yuill
Author:
Mark Brosnan
Author:
Judith Good
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