Frontiers in Virtual Reality (Oct 2022)

RAISE: Robotics & AI to improve STEM and social skills for elementary school students

  • Charles E. Hughes,
  • Charles E. Hughes,
  • Charles E. Hughes,
  • Lisa A. Dieker,
  • Eileen M. Glavey,
  • Rebecca A. Hines,
  • Ilene Wilkins,
  • Kathleen Ingraham,
  • Caitlyn A. Bukaty,
  • Kamran Ali,
  • Kamran Ali,
  • Sachin Shah,
  • Sachin Shah,
  • John Murphy,
  • John Murphy,
  • Matthew S. Taylor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/frvir.2022.968312
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3

Abstract

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The authors present the design and implementation of an exploratory virtual learning environment that assists children with autism (ASD) in learning science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) skills along with improving social-emotional and communication skills. The primary contribution of this exploratory research is how educational research informs technological advances in triggering a virtual AI companion (AIC) for children in need of social-emotional and communication skills development. The AIC adapts to students’ varying levels of needed support. This project began by using puppetry control (human-in-the-loop) of the AIC, assisting students with ASD in learning basic coding, practicing their social skills with the AIC, and attaining emotional recognition and regulation skills for effective communication and learning. The student is given the challenge to program a robot, Dash™, to move in a square. Based on observed behaviors, the puppeteer controls the virtual agent’s actions to support the student in coding the robot. The virtual agent’s actions that inform the development of the AIC include speech, facial expressions, gestures, respiration, and heart color changes coded to indicate emotional state. The paper provides exploratory findings of the first 2 years of this 5-year scaling-up research study. The outcomes discussed align with a common approach of research design used for students with disabilities, called single case study research. This type of design does not involve random control trial research; instead, the student acts as her or his own control subject. Students with ASD have substantial individual differences in their social skill deficits, behaviors, communications, and learning needs, which vary greatly from the norm and from other individuals identified with this disability. Therefore, findings are reported as changes within subjects instead of across subjects. While these exploratory observations serve as a basis for longer term research on a larger population, this paper focuses less on student learning and more on evolving technology in AIC and supporting students with ASD in STEM environments.

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