The Largest Autism Clinical Trial in History Extends its Recruitment Target from 10,000 to 20,000 Children with ASD
Boston, MA (PRWEB) June 15, 2016 -- The MITA clinical trial (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02708290) has enrolled over 10,000 families with children diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) in just six months. In order to continue to expand on autism research and improve its statistical power, Boston-based company ImagiRation is extending recruitment in its observational trial from 10,000 to 20,000 children with ASD.
MITA is a unique, early-intervention application for children with autism that allows parents to administer early-intervention therapy in the comfort of their homes. The application is widely used as a supplement to any other therapy received by a child. MITA is designed for early childhood and intended for long-term, daily use. Its bright, interactive exercises are based on therapeutic techniques that have been shown to be effective for individuals with ASD. Every three months, parents and caregivers are asked to complete a diagnostic questionnaire. This diagnostic information, along with anonymous data analytics from the application, are used to measure the effectiveness of MITA therapy.
Although MITA is designed for long-term use, some parents see the effects of MITA much sooner. Mrs. Amber Bonasse started administering MITA to her son, who was diagnosed with ASD before he turned 3. “I have tried many things for my son, even before the diagnosis to no avail… One of the most profound changes came after he started the MITA program… I was able to definitively see a major difference in him and his ability to problem solve and process,” she writes.
The MITA application is available for free download in the Apple Store, Google Play, and Amazon App Store.
THE SCIENCE BEHIND MITA
MITA is based on Pivotal Response Treatment (PRT), one of the best-supported therapies for children diagnosed with ASD. The exercises target three of four critical areas of development supported by PRT: response to multiple cues, motivation, and self-management.
A child's ability to notice and to respond to multiple visual cues presented simultaneously is the most critical. This ability is typically impaired in individuals with autism, leading to what is commonly described as “stimulus overselectivity”, or "tunnel vision." Improving the capacity to respond to multiple cues has been shown to reduce stimulus overselectivity, which in turn leads to vast improvements in general learning.
A peer-reviewed article describing MITA: http://goo.gl/lyHw95
MITA GAMES
The latest version of MITA (released in May, 2016) includes nine adaptive games that develop a child’s mental-integration ability as well as train their language functions. The visual exercises follow a systematic approach for developing a child's ability to notice multiple characteristics of an object. MITA starts with simple exercises that teach a child to attend to only one feature, such as size or color. Over time, the exercises get more difficult and require the child to attend to two features simultaneously, such as both color and size. In order to solve these puzzles, a child must learn how to hold two pieces of information in their mind (both the size and the color of an object) and make a decision based on the combination of these features. Once a child has practiced attending to two features, the program moves on to puzzles that require attending to three features, such as color, size and shape, and then eventually to puzzles that involve attending to an ever-increasing number of characteristics.
The verbal exercises in MITA also train your child’s mental integration ability. However, these puzzles offer a more conventional, verbal approach to facilitating language acquisition, starting with simple vocabulary, and progressing towards higher forms of language (such as adjectives, prepositions, and syntax).
As a child progresses through MITA's systematic exercises, he or she is developing the ability to simultaneously attend to a greater number of features, reducing the propensity towards tunnel vision, and thus developing an essential component of language. The ability to mentally build an image based on a combination of multiple features is absolutely necessary for understanding syntax, spatial prepositions and verb tenses.
DEVELOPMENT TEAM
MITA is developed by Dr. Andrey Vyshedskiy, a neuroscientist from Boston University; Rita Dunn, a Harvard University-educated early-childhood specialist; MIT-educated Jonah Elgart and a group of award-winning artists and developers working alongside experienced therapists.
MITA in the news: https://youtu.be/giZymh3rMHc
For more information, please visit http://www.imagiration.com or contact us at imagiration(at)gmail(dot)com.
Dr. Andrey Vyshedsky, IMAGIRATION, LLC, http://www.imagiration.com, +1 6178171916, [email protected]
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