Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Novel Product Design Aims to Address Common Autism Behavior

Filed under: Pediatrics , Psychiatry


Some children with autism tend to perform compulsive rituals, and these can distract kids from the rest of the world. Jesse Resnick, a recent graduate of the product design program at Parsons the New School for Design, proposes a new toy-like device to grab kids' attention and limit compulsive behavior to a short time. The Repeat wrist worn device has flashing rubber knobs that blink in preprogrammed patterns, while the child follows along by using fingers to pinch them. According to the product page, Repeat is "an early-intervention tool for autistic children designed to replace repetitive behaviours (arm flapping, head banging, etc.) with a less distracting, less harmful alternative." It's not clear whether the benefit will be clinically valuable, but it does seem like a novel idea.

Product design page: REPEAT...

(hat tip: Yanko Design)

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