Katharina I. Boser, Ph.D.
Katharina I. Boser, Ph.D., received her B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. from Cornell University
in developmental psychology and cognitive science and wrote her dissertation
about the early development of child language. She completed postdoctoral work
at the University of Maryland studying language rehabilitation using computing
technologies for patients with aphasia. In 2000, she joined the research faculty at
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Cognitive Neurology, where until
2005 she studied language training with low-verbal subjects and cognition (number
representation, memory, and visual attention) in children with autism. She has conducted
research on social robots and is involved in usability research with technology
companies developing computer software for use with children with autism and
other cognitive and/or learning issues. She was a board member and later cochair of
the Innovative Technologies for Autism initiative for Autism Speaks until 2011. Dr.
Boser is president of Individual Differences in Learning, an educational nonprofit in
Maryland that provides professional development to teachers and parents regarding
brain-based teaching techniques and innovative technologies for students with
a range of cognitive impairments, including autism and twice exceptionality. She
presents at many national and international conferences on autism technology
research and cognition and advocates for universal design for learning and 21st century
learning and teaching at state and national levels. Since the fall of 2011, she
has been a technology coordinator for the Glenelg Country School in Ellicott City,
Maryland.