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iPad gives voice to kids with autism


This story started on CNN iReport By Supraja Seshadri, Special to CNN
May 14, 2012 -- Updated 1726 GMT (0126 HKT) | Filed under: Gaming and Gadgets

Most popular Tech stories right now Sharia Siddiqui uses an iPad to help her communicate. Her father says it's "given her a sense of control she never had."

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STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Touchscreen iPads are giving voice to autistic children, adults Apps for it and other tablets aid those with trouble verbalizing their thoughts Education and therapy apps also help with other aspects Therapist: Apple's Steve Jobs gave a voice to the voiceless

(CNN) -- Sharia stood immobile in front of the television, transfixed by its images, unaware of the world around her. Her family called her name over and over again, but she did not respond. It was that moment when they knew something was wrong. Initially, they thought it was a hearing problem. When they found nothing wrong, they decided to take 2-year-old Sharia to a specialist at an early detection center in 2009. "Within five minutes of looking at Sharia, (the specialist) said that she has autism," said Sharia's father, Fawad Siddiqui. "A very clear case of it." Siddiqui, 38, and his wife, Ayza Sheikh, were under the impression that Sharia was simply a late talker. Originally from Pakistan, the Siddiquis had no relatives to advise them on their first child. Speech, occupational and behavior therapies helped some. But Sharia still struggled with communication. Then, in 2010, Apple's iPad was released. Siddiqui, a Columbia, Maryland, resident who shared his daughter's story on iReport, said that before having the iPad, Sharia's only way of communicating was crying. She was non-verbal and had no way of expressing what she wanted or how she was feeling. Apple's touchscreen gadget wasn't the first tablet computer and isn't the only one now. But it quickly emerged as the overwhelming market leader, introducing millions of people worldwide to the concept of a computer that dwells somewhere between a smartphone and a

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iPad gives voice to kids with autism - CNN.com

http://edition.cnn.com/2012/05/14/tech/gaming-gadgets/ipad-a...

laptop and offers a large screen full of images and icons with which the user can interact with a single touch. "What the iPad has done has given her a sense of control that she never had before," Siddiqui said. "She knows when you touch it, something is supposed to happen. She knows she doesn't need to cry, she needs to point." At first, Sharia enjoyed watching movies and playing games. However, through therapy and at home, she was introduced to apps such as Proloquo2Go, First Words, ABCs and Me and Puzzle Me, to name a handful. She soon learned to put together short sentences like "I want Dora" to express what she wanted. A communications revolution Proloquo2Go was Sharia's first app and the first real augmented communication app, released first for iPhones in 2009. AAC, or augmentative and alternative communication, is a series of interventions used to help children with severe communication disorders communicate. Many apps are designed based on this method of therapy. David Niemeijer, founder and CEO of Amsterdam-based AssistiveWare, creator of Proloquo2Go, said that 90% of AAC users use an iPad for communication, and more than 25% use an iPhone or iPod Touch, according to the company's surveys. About half of them reported improved speech abilities. A search for "autism apps" for the iPad in Apple's App Store brings 764 hits. About 142 were released this year. Similarly, dozens of assistance and education autism apps have sprung up on tablets and other devices running Google's Android operating system. The accessibility of online stores as a platform for apps has opened a new avenue for parents. Those with the know-how are able to create apps based on their child's specific needs. Tricia Estrada of San Diego has developed apps for her son, Evan. The app and website Wonkido has a series of animations, each about four to five minutes in length, depicting various social skills such as "asking to play" and "going potty." By watching, kids acquire a database of episodes to draw from for future social situations, she said. Estrada said the most appealing facet of the iPad is its mobility. Before, when Evan needed to learn a new concept in the middle of soccer practice or while at a restaurant, she had no way of showing him until the therapist gave him a card or bought a DVD weeks later. With the iPad or iPhone, it's immediate. "I think (the iPad) is revolutionizing the augmentative communication field," said Dr. Oliver Wendt, assistant professor of speech, language and hearing sciences at Purdue University. "It's a very cost-effective system. Before, we had these expensive, bulky items, which now can be replaced with an iPad." The equipment that was used previously could cost $9,000 to $15,000. iPads are now available for as little as $399. A majority of the apps on the iPad are paid apps that cost 99 cents to $299.99. Some of these prices may seem rather expensive for regular iPad users, but autism communities are thrilled. iReport: Steve Jobs helped my autistic son speak Wendt, who specializes in technological aspects of AAC solutions, collaborated with Purdue student group Engineering Projects in Community Service to develop a free app called SPEAKall! based on a widespread autism intervention known as Picture Exchange Communication System. Traditionally, in a low-technology approach, children would hand

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iPad gives voice to kids with autism - CNN.com

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laminated picture cards to their therapist or caretaker in order tell them what they want. The app has two visible parts on the screen: a top row and a bottom row. The top has pictures and symbols, and the bottom is a storyboarding strip where kids can drag and drop the pictures to create sentences. These pictures can include objects, feelings or anything relevant to the child. "It is very important to put symbols on that are truly reinforcing for the child, symbols that match something the child really wants," Wendt said. The app allows parents to take pictures on the spot and add them to the existing bank of symbols. The child is then able to create sentences using the images, such as "I want apple" or "I feel sad." At the end, they can push the "Speak All" icon to hear the sentence. Removing "extra baggage" Martha Herbert, a pediatric neurologist and neuroscientist at Massachusetts General Hospital of Harvard Medical School in Boston, said the iPad allows individuals to bypass many difficulties they have in communicating. Herbert explains that apraxia or dyspraxia is what makes communication difficult. Apraxia means that although your brain can develop an intention of doing something, it is physically difficult to do it. You may want to speak but can't move your lips. "These apps allow you to do a shortcut around the neuromotor problems getting in the way of communication," Herbert said. Communication is not just limited to speech. In order to understand and respond to an individual, you have to be able to decode their body language, facial expressions and lip movement as well. Using the iPad takes away this "extra baggage," Herbert said. "I think it's opening a whole interesting way to be creative about giving people assistance," she said. "You can measure somebody's stress level and somebody can feed it back into their app and tell you if they're about to fall apart or have a meltdown." Khengwah Koh is managing partner with Hearty SPIN, a new startup in Singapore that also recently released an app for low-functioning individuals with autism called Picture AAC. The app is available in English as well as Mandarin and is used in more than 15 countries. While Koh thinks his app and the iPad are great tools for these individuals, he thinks they should be used only as a supplement to other kinds of learning and therapy. "For a child, it shouldn't be just given to them as a babysitting tool," Koh said. "When the app is introduced to the child, first train them how to use (it). ... It's not a game. It's something to be introduced in a systematic way." Phoebe Tucker, a speech language pathologist in Bridgeport, Connecticut, has developed a center for autism called the Montano Assistive Technology Center, a division of United Cerebral Palsy, to integrate various forms of technology for therapy. The center uses iPads along with other therapies. Although Apple did not create the iPad with the intention of helping children with autism, the company does try to build in features for people with disabilities. "Steve Jobs did not realize he was giving a voice to the voiceless," Tucker said. That voice is exactly what Siddiqui feels has been given to Sharia. She is now able to speak in broken sentences and is aware of the world around her. Her family sees small triumphs every day.

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iPad gives voice to kids with autism - CNN.com

http://edition.cnn.com/2012/05/14/tech/gaming-gadgets/ipad-a...

For the first time in three years, the Siddiquis are thinking of taking Sharia to Pakistan to see their extended family. Sharia was diagnosed shortly after their first visit, and the family there only recently came to know of her diagnosis after watching Siddiqui's iReport video of Sharia. The trip depends on whether therapists say Sharia is ready for such a change in environment. But Siddiqui is confident and looking forward to the trip. "I often tell my wife I think of it as Sharia before the iPad and Sharia after the iPad," Siddiqui said. "It was that significant."

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cloudrat
i like using my ipad 2....

BiasObserver
Doesn't get any closer to being a commercial then this.

leoBr
Yep, and the entire coverage of the Egypt uprising was just a commercial for Facebook.

Fedupcrzyppl

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iPad gives voice to kids with autism - CNN.com

http://edition.cnn.com/2012/05/14/tech/gaming-gadgets/ipad-a...

This is awesome!

Jeremy Cole
@Dawn Cat I can understand the gut level response that you don't want to pay taxes for a bunch of fancy technology for someone else's use, but I think there's a powerful logical argument to be made for helping autistic kids learn skills that help them become more self-sufficient and less dependent on very expensive services that your tax dollars are otherwise required to pay for by law. "Teach a man to fish", right? There is also a powerful argument for compassion and fairness. In this case, fairness doesn't mean the same thing for everyone. It means each one gets what they need. This is the basic idea behind the FAPE laws (Free Appropriate Public Education).

rharper2010
Yeah, this is just another Apple advertisement, as technology professionals like myself have been using PC's to allow autistic schoolchildren and other disabled people to talk for decades now. The iPad didn't do anything for this industry, which has been around and serving schools in the Windows space for years. Apple is just co-opting an idea, like it always has, like the '90's and their crappy overpriced product lines. You don't learn from history, and you look weird looking dumbstruck at Apple for playing its old tricks at three times the price, yet again.

leoBr
"Apple is just co-opting an idea..." And yet it's Apple who came up with iPad and the rest of the 'PC' world is catching up as always, did you notice?

leoBr
Actually, mr. professional, if you read the article you'd know that iPad did do 'something' for this industry.

4harmony
I work in schools and am not aware of anything Windows/ PC that is portable like the iPad. As the article says communication devices that were portable are very expensive

John1450
Where there is a sheep, there is a way to make a few bucks off of him. Apple learned that quite early and the rest is history.....

gamburg
We just got a new iPad and we LOVE it. My favorite program called iTunes University that brings over 1,000,000 of classes from places like Yale, Harvard, Stanford available at no charge. Videos, interactive materials, even tests. Teachers can upload entire courses to the iTunes University service and people like you or me can, in essence, take an entire college course for no cost. Surely a win if theres ever been one, and an excellent resource that more people should take advantage of. iPad is a great investment in education. Whats better is that all educational content is absolutely free. With the cost of textbooks alone, not to mention transportation, tuition, and every other cost associated with learning, free is a breath of fresh air in a costly landscape.

Lone
Universities and related institutions have been providing this content for years online. It just wasn't spoon fed.

Dawn Cat
as long as my taxes dont go to pay for them

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iPad gives voice to kids with autism - CNN.com

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Lone
Do you pay taxes? As things go there is a good chance you don't, or that you get money back. Would you rather pay for a box of ammunition or a senators round of golf than a possibly life-improving device for a disabled child? This obsession about taxes is ridiculous and focused in so many of the wrong ways.

john1450
Yawn another free Apple advertisement. It's the app that matters not the iPad. Any tablet or even a mini notebook can get the job done. And if these people where even 1/10th as smart as a rock, they'd forget about the iPad and use a cheaper alternative. Jeez, why not just sell your tech section section to Apple?

leoBr
If you actually read the article you wouldn't post this nonsense.

gamburg
John - do you work for Samsung? You post under every Apple article.

flipnap2112
by the way john, i noticed EVERY article on apple brings you around. if you are so aggravated by all these apple articles, why have you been commenting for the past year on each one?

flipnap2112
i just bought an ipad 2. i didnt see any cheaper alternatives in the store.. seriously.

Chergm
If that's the way we're doing this, I say why not just sell their tech section to Facebook?

jenrose
We discovered a few weeks ago that my seven year old, who has a rare chromosome deletion and has been globally delayed since birth... can read. Our friends and family pitched in and raised enough money in 48 hours that we were able to get her an iPad, rugged case, insurance, and the software of our choice for her. It's already improving her speech, and it's been less than a week. And books that she can't tear or chew on? Priceless.

jmac1954
assistive technology has been around for a long time, this lead me to my first mac in 1993 the only advance I see is the improvement of the touch screen. I bought a touch screen device in 1998 (5500.00 for compter and another 2500.00 for software) and the software the was great. the toch screen was just not where it is today. Apple will always be ahead in the world in my opinion.thanks for letting the tech world and bringing prices down

MG1997
Ok finally something that the Ipad does better than any other device, wait exept any other tablet.

John1450

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iPad gives voice to kids with autism - CNN.com

http://edition.cnn.com/2012/05/14/tech/gaming-gadgets/ipad-a...

Haha, exactly, but don't tell the iSheep.

brownsound
Brool Story Co. This story is ridiculous. I am glad that this little girl has been able to better communicate and has had help developmentally because of the advances of technology, but thanking Apple and Steve Jobs is a huge stretch, don't you think? Using the author's logic, the inventor of tablet PC should be lauded, along with the developer of the apps that girl uses. Not Steve Jobs/Apple

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