LONDON — It wasn't until Jude met Jenny that the 3-year-old autistic boy understood what happy people look like. Jenny, a green trolley car with a human face, had a furrowed brow when her wheel buckled and she got stuck on a track. But after being rescued by friends, she smiled broadly — and that's when something clicked for little Jude Baines.
"It was revelatory," his mother, Caron Freeborn told AP Television News in Cambridge, England. Before watching the video, Jude didn't understand what emotions were and never noticed the expressions on people's faces, even those of his parents or younger brother.
Jenny's adventures are part of a DVD for autistic children released this week in the United States called The Transporters.
The DVD teaches autistic children how to recognize emotions like happiness, anger and sadness through the exploits of vehicles including a train, a ferry, and a cable car.
It is the brainchild of Simon Baron-Cohen, director of the Autism Research Centre at Cambridge University. He also happens to be a cousin of Sacha Baron-Cohen, the comedian behind the characters Ali G, the aspiring rapper, and Borat, the crass Kazakh reporter.
Baron-Cohen first became interested in autism in the 1980s while teaching autistic children. "Why should social interaction be so difficult for a child who has very good skills in other areas like memory or an attention to detail?" he wondered.
About a decade ago, Baron-Cohen suggested that autism — which is much less likely to afflict girls — might be an extreme version of the typical male brain. Men tend to understand the world via patterns and structure, whereas women are more inclined to understand emotions and sympathize with others.
Autism, Baron-Cohen believes, is a condition where people perceive systems and patterns while remaining almost oblivious to other people and their feelings.
To help autistic children understand emotions, Baron-Cohen and his team use eight track-based vehicles in their DVD. The vehicles have human faces grafted onto them, making focusing on human features unavoidable. The video was financed by the British government.
"To teach autistic children something they find difficult, we needed an autism-friendly format," Baron-Cohen said. Autistic children are particularly drawn to predictable vehicles that move on tracks like trains and trams. For years, parents of autistic children have noted their children's attachment to Thomas the Tank Engine.
"Autistic children are often puzzled by faces, so this video helps focus on them in a way that makes it very appealing and soothing," said Uta Frith, an emeritus professor of cognitive development at University College London, who was not involved in developing the video.
Frith said the DVD was a way for autistic children to learn social skills the way other children might learn math or a foreign language.
In a small study of 20 autistic children between ages 4 and 7, Baron-Cohen and colleagues found that autistic children who watched the video for at least 15 minutes a day for one month had caught up with normal children in their ability to identify emotions.
But Baron-Cohen cautioned that while autistic children might be able to recognize emotions better after watching the DVD, that would not necessarily change their behavior at home or on the playground.
"This is not some kind of miracle cure," he said. "It just shows that if you have the opportunity to practice these social skills, you can improve."
Other experts said the video was not a replacement for working and playing with real people.
"You can't just park your child in front of this for hours and go to the other room," said Catherine Lord, director of the Autism and Communication Disorders Center at the University of Michigan. "This will hopefully start interactions or play sequences that kids can then play with real people."
When the DVD was released in Britain in 2007, Baron-Cohen and colleagues distributed 40,000 copies free to families with an autistic child or to doctors working with them.
The DVD sells for $57.50 and includes interactive quizzes and a booklet for parents and teachers. It is available online at http://www.thetransporters.com. Half of the profits go to autism charities and research, and the other half goes to Changing Media Development, the company Baron-Cohen launched with colleagues.
Similar videos have been produced, but Lord said those have struggled to capture children's attention. In Baron-Cohen's study, some parents reported that their children watched the DVD hundreds of times within a month.
Freeborn said The Transporters DVD has made a "massive difference" for Jude and their family.
"(Jude) now understands what disgusted is, which is quite important if you have a younger brother," she said.
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On the Net:
http://www.thetransporters.com
Jude didn't understand what emotions were
Really? Sounds like speculation and attempted mind-reading to me. How the hell do you know what he thought, or understood?
You evidently have never interacted with an Autistic person. They often respond inappropriately to situations because they do not understand visual clues from others. You can show an Autistic child pictures of people with different emotions on their faces (smiling, crying, laughing, pensive, angry) and they will be unable to identify the emotion depicted. I have an adult friend who is Autistic and I often have to tell him how I feel... "I'm crying because I am sad that my pet died."
I have a son who has Asperger's syndrome ( a form of Autism) and I can tell you it's like a blank canvas. He does not show emotion or understand the appropriate emotional responses to situations. He has no friends and is unable to relate to people. He gets frustrated very easily as he doesn't know how to handle a situation.
I am glad this video is out . It may open a lot of doors for families now. I wish governments would fund research for Autism as it has been diagnosed a lot more recently. They found out that doctor's mis-diagnosed children with autism as "emotionally handicapped" in the past. Parents raised their children not knowing why their child was emotionally handicapped.
I agree--my nephew, being autistic, has some inappropriate reactions when he first meets people. However, he receives therapy quite frequently, and is making tremendous strides.
I think this DVD will help autistic persons in all areas of the disorder spectrum.
You evidently have never interacted with an Autistic person
Actually my younger brother is autistic.
To clarify, folks, I'm not at all opposed to this video. Sounds like an okay idea to me. What I am opposed to is blanket statements about how people with autism "don't understand." One can never know with certainty whether its true that they don't understand, or if they understand, but can't relate to others, or if they understand, but don't care to relate . . . the list is endless. Not to mention, autism is a spectrum disorder. It manifests in hundreds, if not thousands, of ways. So it is simply incorrect to overgeneralize about what people with autism do or do not understand.
and I can tell you it's like a blank canvas.
If your son has been diagnosed with Asperger's but he is like a blank canvas, I highly recommend that you seek a second, or third, or fourth opinion. Asperger's is a milder form of Autistic Spectrum Disorder. It's quite possible that your son is fully autistic.
Yes I know that and we have gotten a second opinion. Since he is an adult , they are saying it's Asperger's. He was diagnosed with it just recently. Thanks for the info and advice though, I appreciate it.
this is fascinating, thanks! and i was thinking that this man had a very unfortunate last name (baron-cohen) but being the cousin of sasha i guess he legitimately earned it. good article.
Actually, I was trying to see the resemblance--and heaven help me, I don't see it!
this is a good news. Does it mean the professional would have chance to change autistic people life. Like make them to try to act like normal people and fit in our society. if it is successes, then autistic people would probably obtain more human right and wont be looked down on anymore
Wow , what a great idea. My youngest (now grown) daughter has a central auditory processing disorder. It took us forever to figure out "what was wrong" with her. Finally when she was about 7 I started hearing rumblings about a computer generated sound program that would basically do the same thing that this program does for recognizing emotional cues, but this program would stretch out the 44 phonemes(in the case of the English Language) to a wave length that could be perceived by people with her condition.
These are people who missed the critical period of being able to recognize these sounds from human speech in the first 18 months of life when the neural pathways are formed. The program also used computer games and headphones and gave points for recognition of the sounds at the lengthened wave length. As the student progressed, the wave lengths for that sound got shorter and shorter until they were at the length of human speech, These exercises actually allowed new neural pathways from the ear to the brain to be cut so that the student could finally have some discrimination in sounds. (not just hear pitch and tone) It was like the awakening for her when our daughter progressed in the program. She still doesn't speak any language like a native, and never will, but she speaks, well enough, and understands well enough, to live on her own. Yay.
She is also very "behind" emotionally and socially because of all the time we lost before we found this for her when she was 12. But she eventually did learn to speak and eventually to read (although not that well as she had compensated for these two ways of communicating in other ways) but she is now a junior at a major university getting a BFA in Dance with a 3.4 GPA. She has traveled around Europe with a choir and spent three months in the Alaskan wilderness with NOLS. Without this program, now called, FastForWord, I am not sure that she would not be institutionalized. Amazing. Thank you computer people.
What a great resource! Why not?
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