“看到我总是很开心”:探索LOVOT机器人作为老年人的伴侣。

IF 2 Q3 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL
Lillian Hung, Joey Wong, Karen Lok Yi Wong, Kelvin Cheng-Kian Tan, Vivian Wei-Qun Lou
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:支持人工智能的社交机器人有可能解决长期护理老年人的孤独感和社会隔离。关于老年人如何感知和理解这些机器人以及人类与机器人之间的友谊如何形成的研究有限。这项研究调查了老年人使用社交机器人LOVOT的体验。方法:采用人种学研究设计,我们将LOVOT机器人引入加拿大LTC家庭,进行每周4次的互动。36名居民、7名家庭成员和2名医护人员参与了调查。数据收集包括实地观察笔记和对话访谈。该分析以日本幸福概念ikigai为指导。结果:反身性主题分析确定了四个关键主题。1)快乐:机器人通过互动提供快乐和刺激。2)接纳:对于有行动能力或认知障碍的老年人,LOVOT给予一致的积极回应,提供无条件的接纳感。3)创造力:机器人的非语言交流可以让老年人培养创造性想象力,鼓励个人表达,扩大互动的可能性。4)“不适合我”:并非所有参与者都喜欢LOVOT机器人。结论:人工智能支持的社交机器人在支持老年人的社会心理需求方面显示出潜力,这对LTC实践和未来的研究方向具有更广泛的影响。未来的研究应进一步探索社交机器人在LTC居民中的创造性效用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
"It's always happy to see me": Exploring LOVOT robots as companions for older adults.

Background: AI-enabled social robots present the potential to resolve the loneliness and social isolation of older adults in long-term care (LTC). There is limited research on how older adults perceive and make sense of these robots and how human-robot companionship is formed. This study investigated older adults' experiences using LOVOT, a social robot.

Methods: Using an ethnographic study design, we introduced LOVOT robots to a Canadian LTC home for four weekly interaction sessions. Thirty-six residents, seven family members and two healthcare staff participated. Data collection involved observational field notes and conversational interviews. The analysis was guided by ikigai, a Japanese well-being concept.

Findings: Reflexive thematic analysis identified four key themes. 1) Joy: The robot offers joy and excitement through interactions. 2) Acceptance: For older adults with mobility or cognitive impairments, LOVOT gives consistent positive responses, offering a sense of unconditional acceptance. 3) Creativity: The robot's non-verbal communication allows older adults to grow creative imagination, encouraging personal expression and expanding interaction possibilities. 4) "Not for me": Not all participants like the LOVOT robot.

Conclusion: AI-enabled social robots show potential in supporting the psychosocial needs of older adults, which have broader implications for LTC practices and future research directions. Future research should further explore the creative utility of social robots among LTC residents.

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