Play is essential for child development, yet children with disabilities often face barriers to engaging in meaningful play. The FROB (Family of ROBots) project explores the use of robots to support inclusive play in educational settings. In the initial experimentation involving 17 children with disabilities across 14 classrooms, we compared robot-assisted and traditional toy play, and we investigated, starting from the LUDI theoretical framework, the cognitive and social dimensions of play and play enjoyment. The results suggest that robots foster cooperative play for children with disabilities, reducing solitary play and promoting higher engagement. Additionally, while enjoyment levels were high, variability in early childhood responses suggests a need for further analysis. Finally, while unexpected play behaviors highlight the need for greater flexibility in robot design and play scenarios, this research underscores the potential of robotics in inclusive play and emphasizes the need for adaptive designs. Future work will analyze video data and integrate findings to improve robots to enhance accessibility and participation.

(2025). Inclusive Play Through Robots: Insights from Early Experimentation . Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10446/307887

Inclusive Play Through Robots: Insights from Early Experimentation

D'Ambrosio, Stefano;Gilardoni, Antonella;Giraldo, Mabel;Cazzaniga, Paolo;Besio, Serenella
2025-01-01

Abstract

Play is essential for child development, yet children with disabilities often face barriers to engaging in meaningful play. The FROB (Family of ROBots) project explores the use of robots to support inclusive play in educational settings. In the initial experimentation involving 17 children with disabilities across 14 classrooms, we compared robot-assisted and traditional toy play, and we investigated, starting from the LUDI theoretical framework, the cognitive and social dimensions of play and play enjoyment. The results suggest that robots foster cooperative play for children with disabilities, reducing solitary play and promoting higher engagement. Additionally, while enjoyment levels were high, variability in early childhood responses suggests a need for further analysis. Finally, while unexpected play behaviors highlight the need for greater flexibility in robot design and play scenarios, this research underscores the potential of robotics in inclusive play and emphasizes the need for adaptive designs. Future work will analyze video data and integrate findings to improve robots to enhance accessibility and participation.
antonella.gilardoni@unibg.it
2025
Inglese
Technology for Inclusion and Participation for All: Recent Achievements and Future Directions. 18th International Conference, AAATE 2025, Nicosia, Cyprus, September 10-12, 2025, Proceedings, Part II
Mavrou, Katerina; Encarnação, Pedro;
9783032016317
978-3-032-01632-4
343
350
cartaceo
online
Switzerland
Cham
Springer
AAATE 2025: 18th International Conference of the Association for the Advancement of Assistive Technology in Europe, Nicosia, Cyprus, 10-12 September 2025
18th
Nicosia, Cyprus
10-12 September 2025
internazionale
contributo
Settore PAED-02/A - Didattica e pedagogia speciale
Play; Inclusion; Assistive Technology; Disability; Mobile robot; Human-Robot Interaction
   FROB - Family of ROBots for children with disabilities
   MUR - MINISTERO DELL'UNIVERSITA' E DELLA RICERCA - Segretariato generale Direzione generale della ricerca - Ufficio IV
   2022287PHF_01
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-032-01632-4_42 This work was funded by the Εuropean Union – NextGenerationEU, under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP), Mission 4, Component 2, Investment 1.1, funding call PRIN 2022 D.D. 104 published on 2.2.2022 by the Italian Ministry of University and Research (Ministero dell’Università e della Ricerca), Project Title: FROB - Family of ROBots for children with disabilities – CUP F53D23006100006 and partially by the European Union – NextGenerationEU, under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP) Mission 4 Component 2 Investment Line 1.5: Strengthening of research structures and creation of R&D “innovation ecosystems”, set up of “territorial leaders in R&D”.
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
5
D'Ambrosio, Stefano; Gilardoni, Antonella; Giraldo, Mabel; Cazzaniga, Paolo; Besio, Serenella
1.4 Contributi in atti di convegno - Contributions in conference proceedings::1.4.01 Contributi in atti di convegno - Conference presentations
reserved
Non definito
273
(2025). Inclusive Play Through Robots: Insights from Early Experimentation . Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10446/307887
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