Van Der Steen Steffie, Kamphorst Erica, Griffioen Richard E
Department of Pedagogical and Educational Sciences, Faculty of Behavioural and Social Sciences, University of Groningen, the Netherlands.
Department of Entrepreneurship, Business, Animals & Food, Aeres University of Applied Sciences, Dronten, the Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2025 Mar 19;20(3):e0319939. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0319939. eCollection 2025.
Research with controlled or crossover designs in animal-assisted therapy have largely used control groups receiving no treatment or treatment as usual, which can potentially inflate the effects of these interventions. It is therefore not always clear whether this type of therapy has a positive effect on, for example, the social skills of children with special support needs. To address this, the current study compared children (7-16 years, n = 65) with autism or Down syndrome who received five sessions of dog-assisted therapy (n = 24; 9 female) with an active control group who received five similar sessions of robot dog-assisted therapy (n = 21; 8 female) and a no-treatment control group (n = 20; 8 female). The robot dog was capable of performing autonomous behavior and responding to the child's actions and verbalizations. Using parental questionnaires, we assessed children's social and emotional skills before and after the therapy sessions or waiting period and included a follow-up measurement after 4-6 weeks. On a group level, multilevel analyses showed that children who received dog-assisted therapy improved significantly more in terms of emotional attunement and emotion regulation than children in the two other conditions. No significant differences were found for social confidence, conversational attunement, social cognition, and social motivation. Change from post-test to follow-up was also less apparent. Yet, on a more individual level, when looking at the Reliable Change Index (RCI), most of the highest RCIs (within the 90th percentile) were found in the dog-assisted therapy group. In contrast, most of the lowest RCIs (within the 10th percentile) were found in the robot-assisted group. We discuss the pros and cons of a more individualized approach in this field of study and propose a possible alternative by focusing on interaction dynamics.
在动物辅助治疗中,采用对照或交叉设计的研究大多使用未接受任何治疗或接受常规治疗的对照组,这可能会夸大这些干预措施的效果。因此,这类治疗是否对例如有特殊支持需求的儿童的社交技能有积极影响,并不总是很清楚。为了解决这个问题,本研究将接受五节犬辅助治疗的自闭症或唐氏综合征儿童(7至16岁,n = 65)与接受五节类似的机器人犬辅助治疗的积极对照组(n = 21;8名女性)和未治疗对照组(n = 20;8名女性)进行了比较。机器人犬能够执行自主行为并对儿童的动作和言语做出反应。我们使用家长问卷,在治疗课程或等待期前后评估了儿童的社交和情感技能,并在4至6周后进行了随访测量。在组水平上,多层次分析表明,接受犬辅助治疗的儿童在情感协调和情绪调节方面的改善明显大于其他两种情况下的儿童。在社交信心、对话协调、社会认知和社会动机方面未发现显著差异。从测试后到随访的变化也不太明显。然而,在更个体的水平上,当查看可靠变化指数(RCI)时,犬辅助治疗组中发现了大多数最高的RCI(在第90百分位数内)。相比之下,机器人辅助组中发现了大多数最低的RCI(在第10百分位数内)。我们讨论了在该研究领域采用更个体化方法的利弊,并通过关注互动动态提出了一种可能的替代方案。