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The influence of picture book design on visual attention of children with autism: a pilot study.

Xiang LianWilson Cheong Hin HongXiaoshu XuKolletar-Zhu KimberlyZhi Wang
Published in: International journal of developmental disabilities (2022)
Taking 22 children with mild and moderate autism as subjects and using the TobiiX 120 eye-tracker to record their eye movements in visual search of images in picture books, the characteristics of the process of autistic children viewing picture books were explored. Two measures, fixation counts and gaze duration, were used alongside attention heatmap, to explore the visual patterns among children with autism viewing two types of researcher-made picture books and an ordinary picture book. Using a within-subject design, it was found that children with autism could sustain longer gaze duration and have more fixation points on the effective area of the picture book content when viewing researcher-made picture books than when viewing the ordinary picture book, suggesting better visual attention to single-object and single-pattern picture books. The study offers insights and support for related picture book reading and teaching in the future.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • working memory
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • intellectual disability
  • minimally invasive
  • deep learning
  • machine learning
  • optical coherence tomography