When a person’s exposure to their sensory environment is limited (perhaps due to sensory or mobility challenges), Assistive Technology (AT) can help to make that access more equitable. While there is certainly value in simply improving a person’s sensory experiences across a set of daily activities, ultimately we are scaffolding the development of functional, effective communication.
Without resorting to the advanced tutorial, it is not possible to provide a truly adequate explanation for why this is so; however, a few illustrative examples might help somewhat:
- No mere explanation of an orange can do it full justice; therefore, if only some of the participants in a conversation have experienced an orange, then the word “orange” will not have the same meaning for all of them. (If that example doesn’t move you, substitute a food that you categorize as more exotic, such as Guaraná Antarctica, fried spider, baklava, or balut.)
- When the person’s manipulative abilities are limited, perhaps along with mobility in general, then so is their physical interaction with their environment, and that can impact their understanding of the world; for example, when a person physically manipulates items, they also learn how objects behave when they are moving elsewhere in their visual field. They might take much longer to learn that with rotation, any of the following shapes might turn out to be a cube:
Cube Rotation
- Many people only get to touch items that are brought to them by someone else. A sensory limitation will affect a person’s experience of their environment whether or not items are brought to them.
- Cortical impairments can affect the processing of the information coming in from any or all of the senses.
- Do not demand eye contact (or other sensory focus) as a sign of attention/attentiveness. Some students have difficulty marshalling their limited resources, and asking them to spend effort on eye contact can reduce the energy that they can spend on anything else, like thinking. In addition, demanding eye contact forces masking on people.
- discrimination of colors, patterns, and other salient features of visual images,
- localization (identifying where something is using one’s senses),
- direction (up/down, left/right, and so on),
- visual scanning (follow a sequence of visual cues to navigate a task),
- direction of gaze fixation/tracking, and then focus gaze to track something as it moves through the environment (or to follow an outline or row of text),
- using visual information to help with a subsequent touch task (e.g., seeing that an item is fuzzy can help to identify it by touch), and
- associate the visual perception of a form with a meaning.
- Realistic ←→ Abstract (e.g., photos, cartoons, line drawings, sight words)
- Color, monochrome, greyscale, black and white
- How many in a field (from which to choose)?
- Contextual (i.e., a figure with a background)
- Multimodal (pictures with audio feedback, pictures with raised textures, and so on)
- stressful at the level of a noisy restaurant,
- damaging at the level of a school cafeteria (with prolonged exposure), and
- painful at the level of a siren.
- white/pink/brown/orange noise: fan, aquarium pump, air purifier, radio static, and/or noise-generating software
- In some cases you will want to consult with other specialists, including the student’s doctor, before introducing therapy that involves touch; for example, you would not want to introduce a spine-massaging chair pad if the student has just had spine fusion surgery.
- Do not use food as a manipulable. There’s the waste, the mess caused by sugar, confusion with food differentiation and desensitizing, and so on. Food/Eating programs have value in a sensory curriculum, but can be very involved and should be approached separately.
- Some small manipulables are choking hazards.
- Some materials can cause allergic reactions (e.g., fur, latex gloves or balloons, and so on).
- If the student is challenged with tactile defensiveness (i.e., protective responses to touch that drown out discrimination functions), then you will want to consult first with someone who is trained in treating sensory integration dysfunctions (often an OT for touch in the main, or an Autism Specialist, and certain SLPs and AT folks).
- Stretchy items, such as TheraBand, have their own cautionary documents (so that folks don’t get snapped, and so on).
- Dry particles (beans, sand, pellets, marbles, ball bearings, packing peanuts, rice, dirt), use with or without things buried in it to find
- Dry or wet cornstarch
- Liquid (water, soap, paint, gel, foam, silt/slip) as above (different temperatures)
- Dry or wet clay, putty, dough, mud, cornstarch balloon, grip strengthener
- Hard stuff: metal, glass, plastic
- Sheets (rubber, paper, newsprint, fur, sandpaper, foil, wax paper, metal sheet from foil on up, plastic sheets from clingwrap on up, see Fabric)
- Fabric: gauze, canvas, silk, satin, lycra, Aida cloth, felt, velvet, velour, vinyl, denim, flannel, corduroy, angora, tapestry, burlap, chamois, crepe, embroidered fabrics
- Strings: rope, string, yarn, beaded necklace, chain, cord, shoelace, thread, hair
- Rubber balls of various firmness and texture: Koosh™, bumpy ball
- Blocks and stuff that go together with a click, snap, release, or whatever
- Simple geometric objects: book, ball, tongue depressor, pencil/pen/crayon
- Complex geometric objects: teether, toothbrush, hairbrush, pillow, vibrators
- Dress up (but exercise some reasonable caution around hygiene, like not sharing wigs)
- Gardening (tool use, soil textures, weather)
- Scrapbook (cut/paste, press, glue, turn page)
- Swimming
- Blowing bubbles
- You can practice touch in itself, but also consider such variations as touch firmness/intensity, frequency, duration, and the like.
- Massage (note that some touch, even light touch, can be irritating)
- Between pillows
- Swaddle
- Roller, ball over skin
- Squeeze machine
- Press palms together.
- Pull on each finger.
- Brush with materials listed above.