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A new robot is teaching people with autism to navigate office politics

AGXStarseed

Well-Known Member
(Not written by me)

Adults with autism often find it difficult to read subtle emotional cues that other people may take for granted, and teaching them how to recognize those signals can be a challenge. Researchers at Scotland’s Heriot-Watt University say they’ve invented a solution: Alyx, a robotic emotion teacher.


Alyx was built to address a particular problem: In the US and the UK, more than 80% of autistic adults are unemployed. “And the main issue is not that they can’t do the work,” Thusha Rajendran, one of Alyx’s creators, says. “It’s the workplace politics, especially being able to understand what people really mean, rather than simply what they say. And part of that is understanding emotional expression.”

Alyx’s face is simple, with very few features: humanoid, Rajendran explains, but not human-like. And that’s on purpose; human faces generate lots of small extraneous signals that people with autism can find difficult to decode. By contrast, Alyx’s basic, easily controllable robotic face makes it an ideal teacher of social cues.

In a training session with Alyx, a user would perform a clerical task, like filing paper, and Alyx would respond with a sign of approval or disapproval. Alyx’s creators say this is the main hurdle that adults with autism need help getting over: Knowing whether or not they’re doing a good job. Watch the video above to see how it works.


Source: A new robot is teaching people with autism to navigate office politics
 
Not seeing how this would actually help. So you learn to read the robot; are the people you work with really going to be like that robot? Of course not, and the builders of this robot say it's simpler than humans on purpose. For me I'm sure learning the robot would be fairly easy but that would be nearly useless info to use with real humans because real humans are extremely complex and there is so many other things going on. And sensory issues and other things are pretty big hurtles to being employed as well. For some of us the biggest hurdle.
 
Wake me up when artificial intelligence can successfully emulate and parse jealousy, competitiveness, lies and deceit. Though it were to happen there would probably be other more ominous things to worry about.

 
Not seeing how this would actually help. So you learn to read the robot; are the people you work with really going to be like that robot? Of course not, and the builders of this robot say it's simpler than humans on purpose. For me I'm sure learning the robot would be fairly easy but that would be nearly useless info to use with real humans because real humans are extremely complex and there is so many other things going on. And sensory issues and other things are pretty big hurtles to being employed as well. For some of us the biggest hurdle.

And I'm guessing that this robot is being developed by NT's and has no AS people on the project. RIGHT?
 
I thought for children maybe, but how can any adult take this seriously? To me it's insulting adults with autism since it's making them look like children when weren't NOT, it's a very expensive gimmick and it simply won't work. The best way to practice is through experience and maybe a serious adult training course where autistic adults are treated respectfully, not as stupid children. Even watching educational videos on Youtube is much better than this since you are watching actual people, being like a robot is the opposite of what wants to be achieved. They could achieve exactly the same however using an advanced webcam like a Microsoft Kinect for Windows along with similar software portraying a robot or better real human faces on a standard monitor and it would cost a tiny fraction of the price, but even this would be a gimmick and I doubt it would work.

Here you go:


I bet there's much better videos out there, I found this in 10 seconds. Then there's many videos on body language you can also watch along with communication. I just saved $1000s on a very expensive overpriced toy robot.


And I'm guessing that this robot is being developed by NT's and has no AS people on the project. RIGHT?

I totally agree with your point. I've written on a number of threads stating that autistic people should be involved in projects and support for autistic people since they're by far the best qualified. No NT truly knows what it's like to be autistic. Having NTs only supporting autistic people and on autistic projects is a bit like having a marriage counselling service where not a single person working for the organisation has ever been married or even been in a long term relationship, but it's apparently okay if they've learnt the theory. Yet it is recognised that ex drug addicts make by far the best drug misuse councillors.
 
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This may be off topic, not sure at this point but all this robot stuff reminded me of my favorite graphic novel. Yep, it's for pre-schoolers, but it's a great book.
upload_2018-1-16_15-15-47.jpeg
 

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