(Press-News.org) CHICAGO --- Adults with an autism spectrum disorder, who may have trouble talking about themselves and interacting socially, don't always make good impressions in job interviews and have low employment rates.
A new human simulation training program -- based on software originally used to train FBI agents -- helps adults with autism improve their job interview skills and confidence, reports a new Northwestern Medicine® study.
The new interactive program was designed specifically for adults with psychiatric disorders and was also evaluated for use by adults with autism spectrum disorder. This is the first intervention using human-based simulation that gives these adults repeated practice and feedback on their interviewing skills. The program is now available to the public.
"Adults with an autism spectrum disorder tend to have difficulties with social communication, which may interfere with them having a successful job interview," said lead study author Matthew J. Smith, a research assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. "Our program helps trainees learn to talk about their ability to work as a team member so they sound easy to work with. They also learn how to sound interested and enthusiastic about a potential job, as well as convey that they are a hard worker."
The study will be published May 8 in the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders.
The employment rate for people with autism is very low. In 2009, only 33 percent of young adults with autism had a job. Approximately 50,000 individuals with autism turn 18 each year.
"We hope that this training program can improve the employment potential for persons with autism spectrum disorder," said senior study author Michael Fleming, M.D., a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Feinberg. "Many people with this disorder would like to work but have trouble getting a job."
The program was a collaborative effort between Northwestern, SIMmersion LLC and Morris Bell, a professor of psychiatry at Yale School of Medicine to develop and test the training program.
The trial included 16 individuals, ages 18 to 31, who received the job interview simulation training and 10 in the control group who did not. Those in the training group each practiced 15 to 20 job interviews with the virtual reality training.
Subjects completed two baseline and two follow up interviews with a trained actor playing a human resource employee. The videos of these role-plays were then scored by a human resources expert, who did not know which individuals received the intervention.
For the role-play scores, the training group improved by 11 percent compared to 1 percent for the control group. In self-confidence scores, the training group improved by 22 percent compared to 7 percent for the control group.
The computer or Internet-based training provides users with the opportunity to repeatedly engage in a simulated job interview with a virtual human resources staff member named Molly Porter. Trainees gain experience by speaking their responses to Molly's questions using voice recognition software.
Each of Molly's questions has 10 to 15 responses that have varying degrees of appropriateness and were created by a panel of vocational rehabilitation experts. The virtual environment also provides a job coach who gives in-the-moment feedback about whether the trainee is responding in a way that helps or hurts rapport with Molly. Trainees receive a score at the end of each interview with scores of 90 or better informing them that, "You've got the job!"
When an individual accesses Molly, the program has certain features so a person can identify a disability. The program will take that into account when it asks questions in the job interview. The program was designed to get increasingly difficult as an individual progresses and masters basic skills.
INFORMATION:
The research was supported by grant R44 MH080496 from the National Institute of Mental Health of the National Institutes of Health.
NORTHWESTERN NEWS: http://www.northwestern.edu/newscenter/
Northwestern Medicine® is the collaboration between Northwestern Memorial HealthCare and Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine around a strategic vision to transform the future of healthcare. It encompasses the research, teaching and patient care activities of the academic medical center. Sharing a commitment to superior quality, academic excellence and patient safety, the organizations within Northwestern Medicine comprise more than 9,000 clinical and administrative staff, 3,100 medical and science faculty and 700 students. The entities involved in Northwestern Medicine remain separate organizations. Northwestern Medicine is a trademark of Northwestern Memorial HealthCare and is used by Northwestern University.
Adults with autism virtually learn how to get the job
Simulated training technique teaches how to develop rapport and impress interviewer
2014-05-08
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Hybrid SPECT-CT greatly improves localization of gastrointestinal bleeding
2014-05-08
Leesburg, VA, May 8, 2014—Prompt and accurate localization of the site of bleeding is critical for the management of patients with acute GI bleeding. Planar 99mTc-labeled RBC scintigraphy is sensitive for detection of acute gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding but its accuracy for localization of a bleeding source is arguable, particularly in patients with complex GI anatomy from prior surgeries.
Researchers at the Cleveland Clinic reviewed cases of GI bleeding in patients who had a concurrent hybrid SPECT–CT for evaluating equivocal 99mTc-labeled RBC activity on planar scintigraphy. ...
Gluten-free diet reduces risk of type 1 diabetes in mice
2014-05-08
New experiments on mice show, that mouse mothers can protect their pups from developing type 1 diabetes by eating a gluten-free diet. According to preliminary studies by reseachers at the University of Copenhagen, the findings may apply to humans.
More than 1% of the Danish population has type 1 diabetes, one of the highest incidence rates in the world. New experiments on mice now show a correlation between the health of the pups and their mothers eating a gluten-free diet. Our hope is that the disease may be prevented through simple dietary changes, the researchers say.
"Preliminary ...
Partisan media driving a wedge between citizens, study finds
2014-05-08
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Viewing partisan news reports from both the conservative and liberal viewpoints doesn't make people more accepting of citizens on the other side of the political fence, new research finds.
A study of people in the United States and Israel examined citizens' media consumption: specifically, how often they viewed liberal and conservative news outlets and how often they viewed mainstream, relatively neutral news sites.
Results showed that people who consumed a greater amount of partisan media content were more polarized – even if they viewed partisan content ...
Homemade stink bug traps squash store-bought models, Virginia Tech researchers find
2014-05-08
A Virginia Tech team of researchers has proven that homemade, inexpensive stink bug traps crafted from simple household items outshine pricier models designed to kill the invasive, annoying bugs.
This discovery comes just as warm weather is coaxing the critters out of crevices of homes they were hiding in during the cold winter and homeowners will be looking for a way to get rid of the pest.
Researchers in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences found that the best way to get rid of the little buggers is to fill a foil roasting pan with water and dish soap and ...
Athletes' fear of failure likely to lead to 'choke,' study shows
2014-05-08
A new study by sports scientists at Coventry University and Staffordshire University shows that anxiety about a competitive situation makes even the most physically active of us more likely to slip-up.
The research, which is set to be presented at the British Psychological Society's flagship annual conference this week, tested the anticipation and coordination abilities of 18 active and healthy young adults during two sets of identical physical tests – one ostensibly a practice, the other a competition.
In the 'competitive' trials, researchers found that the participants' ...
Musical training increases blood flow in the brain
2014-05-08
Research by the University of Liverpool has found that brief musical training can increase the blood flow in the left hemisphere of our brain. This suggests that the areas responsible for music and language share common brain pathways.
Researchers from the University's Institute of Psychology, Health and Society carried out two separate studies which looked at brain activity patterns in musicians and non-musicians.
The first study looking for patterns of brain activity of 14 musicians and 9 non-musicians whilst they participated in music and word generation tasks. The ...
The Lancet: Antipsychotic medication associated with reduced rate of violent crime
2014-05-08
People who use antipsychotic medication (such as clozapine or risperidone) to treat psychiatric illness are nearly half as likely to commit a violent crime compared to when they are not using such medication, according to new results published in The Lancet. The use of mood stabilising drugs (such as lithium or carbamazepine) is also associated with a reduced rate of violent crime, although the reduction is less pronounced, and only in patients with bipolar disorder.
Antipsychotic and mood stabilising medication are used to treat a variety of disorders, but are most commonly ...
Study suggests improved survivorship in the aftermath of the medieval Black Death
2014-05-08
Human mortality and survival may have improved in the generations following the Black Death, according to results published May 7, 2014, in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Sharon DeWitte from University of South Carolina.
As one of the most devastating epidemics in human history, the medieval Black Death (c. 1347-1351) killed tens of millions of Europeans. Previous studies have shown that the disease targeted elderly adults and sick or stressed people; however, not much is known about any substantial changes in the population, like overall health and mortality, before ...
Scientists focus on role of ventilation in preventing tuberculosis transmission
2014-05-08
Scientists studying the role of room ventilation in tuberculosis transmission found that students in Cape Town, South Africa, spend almost 60 percent of their day in poorly ventilated rooms, at risk of transmission, according to results published May 7, 2014, in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Eugene Richardson from Stanford University School of Medicine and colleagues. The researchers propose an increase in low-cost, WHO-compliant natural ventilation to facilitate healthy indoor environments and reduce risks.
Despite biomedical improvements to treat tuberculosis ...
A new tool to measure the speed of aging
2014-05-08
A physical test for measuring age shows wide differences between the rates of aging among different population groups, according to new research by demographers at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis.
A strong handshake can say a lot about a person—it can indicate power, confidence, health, or aggression. Now scientists say that the strength of a person's grasp may also be one of the most useful ways to measure people's true age.
In a new study published today in the journal PLOS ONE, IIASA researchers Serguei Scherbov and Warren Sanderson (also at ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Powering AI from space, at scale
New Watson College seed grants encourage interdisciplinary research
A new immune evasion pathway in cancer reveals statins as immunotherapy boosters
Understanding how smart polymer solutions transition to gels around body temperature
Thermal transport modulation in YbN-alloyed ALN thin films to the glassy limit
Being a night owl may increase your heart risk
Parental firearm injury linked to increased mental health burden in children
Do men develop cardiovascular disease earlier than women?
Fecal microbiota transplantation improves response to immunotherapy in advanced kidney cancer: TACITO study published in Nature Medicine
Research Spotlight: a new “lab-on-a-disc” device paves the way for more automated liquid biopsies
Fast-growing trees are taking over the forests of the future and putting biodiversity and climate resilience under pressure
Stroke prevention and treatment during and after pregnancy are key to women’s health
New Alzheimer Europe report projects 64% increase in dementia across Europe by 2050
How does TikTok shape young peoples' dietary preferences?
Novel laser therapy device generates promising results in prostate cancer clinical trial
Does screen time affect teens’ sleep and lifestyle habits?
How do native and non-native plants affect endangered plant species in cities?
Men’s heart attack risk climbs by mid-30s, years before women
New study signals major advance in the future of precision cancer care
Long COVID brain fog far more common in US than India, other nations
International differences exist in knowledge gaps and most common perimenopause symptoms
Investigational blood biomarker panel may improve detection of pancreatic cancer
AAVLINK: Potent DNA-recombination method for large cargo delivery in gene therapy
Treatment initiation is possible with a positive liquid biopsy in primary central nervous lymphoma patients with difficult-to-access lesions
Artificial nighttime lighting is suppressing moth activity
What causes chronic pain? New study identifies key culprit in the brain
Counting the carbon cost of E-waste
Stanford research teams tackle environmental impacts of U.S. policy
Grant to expand self-cloning crop technology for Indian farmers
Atlantic nurse sharks show faster growth patterns in Biscayne Bay than nearby Bimini, Bahamas
[Press-News.org] Adults with autism virtually learn how to get the jobSimulated training technique teaches how to develop rapport and impress interviewer

