Google+ Autisme, wat nu..?: Autisme en Xbox Kinect

donderdag 10 mei 2012

Autisme en Xbox Kinect

Wie had dat ooit gedacht? Kinect is niet alleen een nutteloze gadget waarmee je vijf minuten je vrienden versteld kan doen staan. De motion sensor van Microsoft kan namelijk gebruikt worden om de diagnose autisme bij kinderen vast te kunnen stellen, zo is te lezen bij New Scientist. De Universiteit van Minnesota gebruikt vijf Kinect-camera’s om een kamer vol met kinderen in de gaten te houden. De techniek in het apparaatje is zo geavanceerd dat afwijkend gedrag opgemerkt kan worden, en dat geeft mogelijk weer een vorm van autisme aan. Goede zaak om te horen dat Kinect ook nuttig kan zijn.


An automated system that keeps watch over children could spot the telltale signs of autism and lead to earlier diagnoses

THE noise level is rising at the Shirley G. Moore Laboratory School. Children are charging through the classroom shouting, playing, picking up toys and tossing them around. All the while, in the corners of the room, five Kinect motion sensors watch and record their every move.

The unusual set-up at the University of Minnesota's Institute of Child Development in Minneapolis is designed to look for signs of behavioural disorders. The plan is to find out if Microsoft's gaming sensor, combined with computer-vision algorithms trained to detect behavioural abnormalities, can be used to automate the early diagnosis of autism.

Diagnosing an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in young children is tricky, but the earlier a child can begin speech therapy and get help learning social and communication skills, the better. Many different symptoms may suggest a child has an ASD, but they are subtle. It usually takes an experienced doctor to spot the signs by analysing video footage of the child playing - a costly and time-consuming process.

To find out if a computer can automate all or part of this process, Guillermo Sapiro, Nikolaos Papanikolopoulos and colleagues have fitted the nursery with five Kinect depth-sensing camera rigs to monitor groups of around 10 children aged between 3 and 5 years old as they play.

The cameras identify and track children based on their shape and the colour of the clothes they are wearing. The information is fed to three PCs, which run software that logs each child's activity level - including how they move each of their limbs - and plots it against the room's average. The system can flag up children who are hyperactive or unusually still - both possible markers for autism.

Medical staff can then decide whether the child requires closer attention from a specialist for a one-on-one diagnosis. The system will be presented at the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation in St Paul, Minnesota, this month.

"The idea is not that we are going to replace the diagnosis, but we are going to bring diagnosis to everybody," Sapiro says. "The same way a good teacher flags a problem child, the system will do automatic flagging and say, 'Hey, this kid needs to see an expert'."

Ultimately, the team hopes to merge the Kinect work with another project it is working on. By studying video footage of children interacting with a psychiatrist, computer-vision algorithms learn to identify behavioural markers as designated on the Autism Observation Scale for Infants. The system measures traits like a child's ability to follow an object as it passes in front of the eyes, as well as noting certain mannerisms or postures that are classified as being early signs of a possible ASD. Early tests have been in agreement with professional diagnosis, says Sapiro.

"Early diagnosis is critical in helping people with autism get the support they need," says Caroline Hattersley of The National Autistic Society in London, who stresses that specialists are still needed. "While this technology could potentially identify some signs of autism, there are many factors, such as language delay and limited eye contact that it would miss."

"We are trying to do very difficult and expert analysis that a psychiatrist would do, but automatically," says Sapiro. He envisages a specially developed video game for Kinect that would test a child as they played with a parent and flag up any concerns.



Bron: New Scientist




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