BC Children's and Women's Hospital, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Alzheimers Dement. 2022 Dec;18 Suppl 2:e059261. doi: 10.1002/alz.059261.
Persons living with dementia and their care partners place a high value on aging in place and maintaining independence. Socially assistive robots - embodied characters or pets that provide companionship and aid through social interaction - are a promising tool to support these goals. There is a growing commercial market for these devices, with functions including medication reminders, conversation, pet-like behaviours, and even the collection of health data. While potential users generally report positive feelings towards social robots, persons with dementia have been under-included in design and development, leading to a disconnect between robot functions and the real-world needs and desires of end-users. Furthermore, a key element of social and emotional connectedness in human relationships is emotional alignment - a state where all partners have congruent emotional understandings of a situation. Strong emotional alignment between users and robots will be necessary for social robots to provide meaningful companionship, but a computational model of how to achieve this has been absent from the field. To this end, we propose and test Affect Control Theory (ACT) as a framework to improve emotional alignment between older adults and social robotics.
Using a Canadian online survey, we introduced respondents to three exemplar social robots with older adult-specific functionalities and evaluated their responses around features, emotions, and ethics using standardized and novel measures (n=171 older adults, n=28 care partners, and n=7 persons living with dementia).
Overall, participants responded positively to the robots. High priority uses included companionship, interaction, and safety. Reasoning around robot use was pragmatic; curiosity and entertainment were motivators to use, while a perceived lack of need and the mechanical appearance of the robots were detractors. Realistic, cute, and cuddly robots were preferred while artificial-looking, creepy, and toy-like robots were disliked. Most importantly, our evidence supported ACT as a viable model of human-robot emotional alignment.
This work supports the development of emotionally sophisticated, evidence-based, and user-centered social robotics with older adult- and dementia-specific functionality.
患有痴呆症的人和他们的护理伙伴非常重视在原地养老和保持独立。社交辅助机器人——具有人类形态或宠物形态的机器人,通过社交互动提供陪伴和帮助——是支持这些目标的有前途的工具。这些设备的商业市场不断增长,具有药物提醒、对话、宠物行为甚至健康数据收集等功能。虽然潜在用户通常对社交机器人有积极的感受,但痴呆症患者在设计和开发中被严重忽视,导致机器人功能与最终用户的实际需求和愿望脱节。此外,人际关系中社会和情感联系的一个关键要素是情感协调——一种所有合作伙伴对情况有一致情感理解的状态。用户和机器人之间的强烈情感协调对于社交机器人提供有意义的陪伴是必要的,但该领域缺乏实现这一目标的计算模型。为此,我们提出并测试了情感控制理论(ACT)作为改善老年人和社交机器人之间情感协调的框架。
我们使用加拿大在线调查,向受访者介绍了具有老年特定功能的三个范例社交机器人,并使用标准化和新颖的措施评估了他们对功能、情感和道德的反应(n=171 名老年人、n=28 名护理伙伴和 n=7 名患有痴呆症的人)。
总的来说,参与者对机器人的反应积极。高优先级用途包括陪伴、互动和安全。对机器人使用的推理是务实的;好奇心和娱乐是使用的动机,而缺乏需求感和机器人的机械外观是阻碍因素。逼真、可爱和可爱的机器人更受欢迎,而看起来不自然、令人毛骨悚然和玩具般的机器人则不受欢迎。最重要的是,我们的证据支持 ACT 作为一种可行的人机情感协调模型。
这项工作支持开发具有情感复杂性、基于证据和以用户为中心的社交机器人,具有老年和痴呆症特定功能。