Autism Affects: cognition, kinesthetics and practice based research

Area of Study This paper explores the methods for conducting and evaluating a practice based interdisciplinary research project,informed by cognitive neuroscience and using drama as an intervention for autistic spectrum conditions. Methodological Approach The research uses a practice based methodolo...

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Main Authors: Shaughnessy, Nicola, Trimingham, Melissa
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://kar.kent.ac.uk/31545/
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spelling ftkentuniv:oai:kar.kent.ac.uk:31545 2023-05-15T15:14:00+02:00 Autism Affects: cognition, kinesthetics and practice based research Shaughnessy, Nicola Trimingham, Melissa 2012 https://kar.kent.ac.uk/31545/ unknown Shaughnessy, Nicola, Trimingham, Melissa (2012) Autism Affects: cognition, kinesthetics and practice based research. In: Theatrical Histories - American Society for Theatre Research, 31/10/2012 - 04/11/2012, Nashville USA. (Unpublished) (The full text of this publication is not currently available from this repository. You may be able to access a copy if URLs are provided) (KAR id:31545 </31545>) PN2000 Dramatic representation. The theatre Conference or workshop item PeerReviewed 2012 ftkentuniv 2023-03-12T19:00:14Z Area of Study This paper explores the methods for conducting and evaluating a practice based interdisciplinary research project,informed by cognitive neuroscience and using drama as an intervention for autistic spectrum conditions. Methodological Approach The research uses a practice based methodology (as distinct from practice as research) which, in itself is predicated upon embodied cognition and action learning approaches. Unusually for an arts project, the evaluative methods include quantitative as well as qualitative measures of efficacy. ‘ Abstract The focus of the paper is an interdisciplinary case study: Imagining Autism. This project involves cognitive psychologists and performance practitioners investigating how drama can be used as a means of engaging with and understanding autism. We outline our development of methods which embrace aesthetic and instrumental considerations in the evaluation of the work. This challenges the conventional dualisms which underpin qualitative and quantitative methodologies. The notion of ‘material anchors’ in conceptual blending (Sinha 2005, Hutchins 2005) drives the play based activities in which the children engage while in the immersive environments of the performance space. Highly visual, physical and sensory stimuli such as puppets, objects and simple media (paper, cloth, shadows, light and sound), facilitate the children’s capacity for cognitive processing, anchoring their attention, developing new imaginative ‘blends’ and demonstrating empathic understanding and responses to the various environments they encounter (Outer Space, Under the Sea, Under World, Forest and Arctic). As well as considering how cognitive approaches have influenced the evaluative methods, the paper also discusses the role of kinesthetic empathy in the training processes we have developed. Our approach emphasises the importance of the practitioner’s embodied engagement in practice based research. Using contemporary performance techniques in the development of intuitive, open and holistic ... Conference Object Arctic University of Kent: KAR - Kent Academic Repository Arctic Sinha ENVELOPE(-136.150,-136.150,-75.067,-75.067)
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collection University of Kent: KAR - Kent Academic Repository
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topic PN2000 Dramatic representation. The theatre
spellingShingle PN2000 Dramatic representation. The theatre
Shaughnessy, Nicola
Trimingham, Melissa
Autism Affects: cognition, kinesthetics and practice based research
topic_facet PN2000 Dramatic representation. The theatre
description Area of Study This paper explores the methods for conducting and evaluating a practice based interdisciplinary research project,informed by cognitive neuroscience and using drama as an intervention for autistic spectrum conditions. Methodological Approach The research uses a practice based methodology (as distinct from practice as research) which, in itself is predicated upon embodied cognition and action learning approaches. Unusually for an arts project, the evaluative methods include quantitative as well as qualitative measures of efficacy. ‘ Abstract The focus of the paper is an interdisciplinary case study: Imagining Autism. This project involves cognitive psychologists and performance practitioners investigating how drama can be used as a means of engaging with and understanding autism. We outline our development of methods which embrace aesthetic and instrumental considerations in the evaluation of the work. This challenges the conventional dualisms which underpin qualitative and quantitative methodologies. The notion of ‘material anchors’ in conceptual blending (Sinha 2005, Hutchins 2005) drives the play based activities in which the children engage while in the immersive environments of the performance space. Highly visual, physical and sensory stimuli such as puppets, objects and simple media (paper, cloth, shadows, light and sound), facilitate the children’s capacity for cognitive processing, anchoring their attention, developing new imaginative ‘blends’ and demonstrating empathic understanding and responses to the various environments they encounter (Outer Space, Under the Sea, Under World, Forest and Arctic). As well as considering how cognitive approaches have influenced the evaluative methods, the paper also discusses the role of kinesthetic empathy in the training processes we have developed. Our approach emphasises the importance of the practitioner’s embodied engagement in practice based research. Using contemporary performance techniques in the development of intuitive, open and holistic ...
format Conference Object
author Shaughnessy, Nicola
Trimingham, Melissa
author_facet Shaughnessy, Nicola
Trimingham, Melissa
author_sort Shaughnessy, Nicola
title Autism Affects: cognition, kinesthetics and practice based research
title_short Autism Affects: cognition, kinesthetics and practice based research
title_full Autism Affects: cognition, kinesthetics and practice based research
title_fullStr Autism Affects: cognition, kinesthetics and practice based research
title_full_unstemmed Autism Affects: cognition, kinesthetics and practice based research
title_sort autism affects: cognition, kinesthetics and practice based research
publishDate 2012
url https://kar.kent.ac.uk/31545/
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op_relation Shaughnessy, Nicola, Trimingham, Melissa (2012) Autism Affects: cognition, kinesthetics and practice based research. In: Theatrical Histories - American Society for Theatre Research, 31/10/2012 - 04/11/2012, Nashville USA. (Unpublished) (The full text of this publication is not currently available from this repository. You may be able to access a copy if URLs are provided) (KAR id:31545 </31545>)
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