Description: |
[DMS Seminar] Dr Koushik Maharatna (University of Southampton, UK) -- On the Application of ICT-based Remote Healthcare Strategy for Treating Autistic Children at Home |
Date: |
Monday, Aug 22, 2016 |
Time: |
4 p.m. - 5 p.m. |
Venue: |
108, Lecture Hall Complex |
Details: |
Remote healthcare strategies enabled by advances in apparently
diverse disciplines of Information and Communication Technology (ICT)
have gained significant research attentions in the recent time. Miniaturised
sensors and enormous processing power offered by the modern computing
devices allows one to capture a plethora of physiological and
environmental signals and subsequent analysis to unearth new knowledge that may one
day be translated into real clinical practice to offer novel services to the
society like proactive diagnosis and effective rehabilitation. To date
most efforts in applying remote healthcare technology concentrated in the
domain of Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) and Stroke rehabilitation although more
and more efforts are currently underway in its application in
neurodegenerative diseases. In this context, the present talk will give an overview on how
such technology could be applied in treating autism - a lifelong
debilitating condition that sets at the early childhood incurring
enormous socio-economic cost to the society. Two main aspects have been
identified by researchers over the years regarding treating autistic children: 1)
early diagnosis and, 2) delivering effective intervention. It has been proved
that if autism could be diagnosed at an early age (around 18 month) then by
deploying child-centric intensive behavioural intervention it may be
possible to mitigate significant abnormalities of autism. However it has
also been recognised that diagnosis through state-of-the-art behavioural
observation may not always lead to correct diagnosis especially at such
an early age. On the other hand it has also been shown that to make
significant behavioural changes intensive intervention for about 25 hrs/week is
necessary. Such level of intervention is very much unlikely to be
achievable in clinics only due to the load on therapists and its associated cost
factor. This talk will try to describe a nomadic framework under which
both of these key issues of treating autistic children may be addressed
amalgamating advanced signal processing techniques for analysing
Electroencephalography (EEG) signals acquired in task- and
person-specific way with serious gaming strategy deployed at home. The main work
described in this talk has been originated from EU FP7 funded project MICHELANGELO
and here we will show some preliminary results which may be translated into
future clinical practice for treating autism. |
Calendar: |
Seminar Calendar (entered by saugata.bandyopadhyay) |