This cutting-edge volume explores how technological tools can be designed, engineered and implemented to assess and support individuals with neurodevelopmental disorders from diagnosis through to rehabilitation. Tanu Wadhera and Deepti Kakkar and their expert contributors focus on technological tools as equalizers in Neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) at every stage, the importance of demand-specific design, and how we can best engineer and deploy both invasive and non-invasive individual-centered approaches that support and connect individuals. Considering the perspectives of patients, clinicians and technologists, it explores key topics including design and evaluation of platforms for tech-tools, automated diagnosis, brain imaging techniques, tech-diagnostic frameworks with AI and machine learning, sensing technology, smart brain prosthetics, gamification, alternative communication devices, and education tools and interactive toys. Outlining future challenges for research, Enabling Technology for Neurodevelopmental Disorders is useful for scholars and professionals in psychology, technology, engineering and medicine concerned with design, development and evaluation of a range of assistive technological tools.
About the Author: Tanu Wadhera is Assistant Professor at Department of Electrical and Instrumentation Engineering, Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology, Patiala, Punjab, India. She earned her Ph.D. degree in Electronics and Communication Engineering and has a total of six years of research experience, with four years at National Institute of Technology, Jalandhar, Punjab, India. Her research interests include Artificial Intelligence, Assistive Technology, Behavioural Modelling, Biomedical Signal Processing, Cognitive Neuroscience and Machine Learning.
Deepti Kakkar is Assistant Professor at Department of Electronics and Communication, National Institute of Technology, Jalandhar, Punjab, India. She has a total academic experience of 15 years and has guided more than 40 postgraduate engineering dissertations and over 30 papers international Journals and Conferences. Her recent research interests include Cognitive Neuroscience and Neurodevelopmental disorders.