News Article

IES SBIR Success Stories: HandHold Adaptive
Date: Jan 01, 2013
Source: SBIR Success Stories ( click here to go to the source)

Featured firm in this article: HandHold Adaptive LLC of Shelton, CT



Product:
HandHold Adaptive creates smartphone and tablet applications for special education. iPrompts, the company's flagship application was developed with funding from IES SBIR. This application is used by educators of students with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) to create and present visual supports, such as visual schedules, timers, choice boards, video modeling clips, and Social Stories. The application allows educators to rapidly incorporate images from smartphone/tablet cameras and the Internet into the individualized visual supports they create, producing on-the-fly scaffolding that helps students make transitions, remain on task, and learn social skills.

Research and Development:
The application was designed iteratively by HandHold's developers using Apple and Android software development kits. To ensure usability, native user interface elements were emphasized when writing code on each of the Apple and Android platforms. Several open-source libraries, such as CouchDB, augmented this effort. Project team members, including HandHold product designers and researchers from the Center for Excellence on Autism Spectrum Disorders at Southern Connecticut State University and the Yale Child Study Center, tested preliminary "Alpha" versions of the software before deploying "Beta" versions to educators and students participating in formal field tests.

Over the course of the project, three feasibility tests (each investigating a component of the project) and one pilot study (of the completed iPrompts PRO suite) were conducted in Connecticut schools. In one field test involving 29 educators and 88 students with ASDs (aged 5-16), 82% of observations identified a positive impact on student on-task behavior and attentiveness. Every participating teacher felt iPrompts was not too complex to set up. The pilot study, being carried out now with 40 students with ASDs and scheduled to conclude in June of 2013, is a randomized controlled trial designed to examine the progress of students whose educators received iPrompts (on the iPad and iPod Touch) to students whose educators used standard practice visual support tools (e.g., low-tech visual supports).

Commercialization:
Available to consumers and educators on the iOS and Android platforms, iPrompts has on several occasions topped the iTunes sales charts (Medical, Grossing, daily sales). More than 10,000 people around the world have downloaded the software since its introduction to the commercial market. The application was a Finalist in the About.com Reader's Choice Awards (Favorite Special Needs App, 2012), a Finalist at the 2012 SIIA Innovation Incubator program, and is featured in the Autism Speaks online marketplace.

Industry Recognition:
In 2013, iPrompts was selected as one of the products listed in Autism Speaks' Guide to Technology.