Showing posts with label Let's Face It. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Let's Face It. Show all posts

Sunday, June 10, 2012

'AUTISTImotions'



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Professional portraits of the students, paired with activities or objects they selected as motivators for their emotions, will be on view at The Warhol in an exhibition titled About Face, opening Feb. 4, 2012.
Photography by Arne Svenson

The Art of Reading a Face - As part of an innovative new partnership with a local school, The Warhol is using Andy Warhol’s full bag of art-making tricks to help kids with autism develop face-reading skills.

...This exercise is just one lesson in an arts-focused curriculum developed by educators at The Andy Warhol Museum in partnership with nationally acclaimed educator Abraham-Braff to teach facial cues to this moderate- to high-functioning group of students at Wesley Spectrum Highland School, a private school in the South Hills of Pittsburgh that serves students with learning and behavior issues.
Now in its second year, the focus of the program is helping students interpret, as well as mirror, five simple emotions: happy, sad, angry, scared, and surprised.

Now in its second year, the focus of the program is helping students interpret, as well as mirror, five simple emotions: happy, sad, angry, scared, and surprised.

This difference, he notes, seems to have its roots in an area of the brain called the furiform gyrus. In typically developed brains, this region is activated more by faces than other objects. But not so for people with autism; when looking at a face, the area of the brain that lights up for them is one typically associated with what’s called non-expert objects, suggesting that they view a face as just another object, not as anything special. [Jim Tanaka, a face researcher in the psychology department at the University of Victoria in British Columbia]

“I literally got swept into their fever pitch of creativity,” says Svenson, who has a background in special education.


“It wasn’t an easy task to get them to match their expression to the emotion; they struggle with identifying and mirroring emotion,” says Varner. “But it was a good learning exercise. And working with a New York artist, who was there specifically for them, gave them a huge boost in self confidence.”


Produced as glossy keepsake booklets for the kids, the portraits—each paired with the object or activity selected by the students as motivators for their emotions—will be on view at The Warhol in an exhibition titled About Face, opening Feb. 4, 2012.


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Students tried their hands at ink-blot drawing, silkscreening, and even fashioned their own sock monkeys, matching the puppet’s facial expression to its imagined personality.

To improve “face expertise” in children with ASD—now on average one in every 110 children—Tanaka developed the Let’s Face It! computer program, a collaborative project with the Yale Child Study Center funded by the National Institutes of Health. This series of computer games tasks kids with distinguishing faces from everyday objects, attaching labels to facial expressions, and interpreting the meaning of facial cues in a social context.
published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, with museum educators. His research showed that when 42 children with autism played just 20 hours of Let’s Face It!, it created measurable improvement in their recognition abilities. (The program can be downloaded for free at http://web.uvic.ca/~letsface/letsfaceit.)
“We want to teach the kids better self-awareness and understanding of nonverbal facial recognition skills, key tools in everyday problem solving.”
- Art teacher Lynda Abraham-Braff
By Julie Hannon
[read the complete article]

Carnegie Magazine | Winter 2011 | The Art of Reading a Face - By Julie Hannon

www.carnegiemuseums.org/






Note: 'About Face', 'Let's Face It' and 'The Art of Face Recognition'(article) continues the  the acknowledgement of  AUTISTImotions.  Individuals on the Autism Spectrum are emotional, feel emotions, express emotions and can learn the concepts of emotions.  AUTISTImotions is the intellectual property, a copyright, trademark, and service mark of EnjoyHi5Autism.






More info. on 'About Face'

Photo exhibit focuses on emotions of students with autism ...

... exhibition of the work of photographer Arne Svenson has opened at The Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh. Svenson's ... photo. The "About Face" exhibit is part of the museum's ...
www.smartbrief.com/news/aaaa/storyDetails.jsp?issueid=E...

CEC SmartBrief

... exhibition of the work of photographer Arne Svenson has opened at The Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh. Svenson's ... photo. The "About Face" exhibit is part of the museum's ...
www.smartbrief.com/servlet/ArchiveServlet?issueid=E07198...


Carnegie Magazine | Winter 2011 | The Art of Reading a Face - By Julie Hannon

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Let's Face It



Let's Face It! is a joint project between the University of Victoria Brain and Cognition Lab and the Yale Child Study Centre. The program is a multimedia, computer-based intervention that is designed to teach face processing skills to children with autism. Research has shown that in addition to their difficulties with language and social communication, children with autism may experience difficulties in their ability to recognize facial identity and emotions. Our goal is to design, implement, and evaluate science-based interventions in face processing based on research findings in psychology and neuroscience. 

The Let's Face It! (LFI!) program guides the child through a series of engaging, interactive game modules designed to teach basic face processing skills. The games are further described in the Computer Fun section on this site. For further information into the research background and context in which LFI! has been created, please check out our Face Activities page. These activities were created so that parents, teachers and interventionists can get the most out of the LFI! program.





The Let's Face It! (LFI!) group is composed of faculty, graduate students and undergraduate students from the Cognitive and Brain Sciences program at the University of Victoria in Victoria, British Columbia. The group's mission is to develop state-of-the-art interventions in face processing for children with autism spectrum disorders and children with specialized learning needs. The LFI! interventions are science-based and grounded in the latest research findings from our lab: VizCogLab




We are committed to an integrative inreach/outreach model of intervention where parents, teachers, practitioners and children play an active role in shaping the goals and content of our treatment programs.

  Let's Face It

The LFI! interventions incorporate cutting-edge computer technologies with practical, hands-on materials.

New! CARTE

Recent Let's Face It! outeach efforts are being supported by the University of Victoria's new Centre for Autism Research, Technology and Education (CARTE). Please visit our new website to learn all about CARTE!