About | Contact Us | Register | Login
ProceedingsSeriesJournalsSearchEAI
Smart Objects and Technologies for Social Good. Second International Conference, GOODTECHS 2016, Venice, Italy, November 30 – December 1, 2016, Proceedings

Research Article

A Review of Websites and Mobile Applications for People with Autism Spectrum Disorders: Towards Shared Guidelines

Download(Requires a free EAI acccount)
519 downloads
Cite
BibTeX Plain Text
  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1007/978-3-319-61949-1_28,
        author={Antonina Dattolo and Flaminia Luccio},
        title={A Review of Websites and Mobile Applications for People with Autism Spectrum Disorders: Towards Shared Guidelines},
        proceedings={Smart Objects and Technologies for Social Good. Second International Conference, GOODTECHS 2016, Venice, Italy, November 30 -- December 1, 2016, Proceedings},
        proceedings_a={GOODTECHS},
        year={2017},
        month={7},
        keywords={Information and communication technology Mobile applications Websites Autism spectrum disorders},
        doi={10.1007/978-3-319-61949-1_28}
    }
    
  • Antonina Dattolo
    Flaminia Luccio
    Year: 2017
    A Review of Websites and Mobile Applications for People with Autism Spectrum Disorders: Towards Shared Guidelines
    GOODTECHS
    Springer
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-61949-1_28
Antonina Dattolo1,*, Flaminia Luccio2,*
  • 1: University of Udine
  • 2: Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia
*Contact email: antonina.dattolo@uniud.it, luccio@unive.it

Abstract

Many studies show the effective positive impact of using computer technologies to support the lives of users with autism spectrum disorders (ASD), for simplifying interaction with other people, for organising daily activities, for improving relation with family and friends. Despite that, only a restricted part of the current websites is accessible for people with ASD. In this paper, we discuss a set of guidelines that should be followed by designers while developing websites or mobile applications for users with ASD. We review many of the existing websites and applications in order to check which comply with all, or parts of these guidelines. We finally highlight current common limitations and address new challenging research directions.

Keywords
Information and communication technology Mobile applications Websites Autism spectrum disorders
Published
2017-07-28
Appears in
SpringerLink
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-61949-1_28
Copyright © 2016–2025 ICST
EBSCOProQuestDBLPDOAJPortico
EAI Logo

About EAI

  • Who We Are
  • Leadership
  • Research Areas
  • Partners
  • Media Center

Community

  • Membership
  • Conference
  • Recognition
  • Sponsor Us

Publish with EAI

  • Publishing
  • Journals
  • Proceedings
  • Books
  • EUDL