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Affective Responses of Older Adults to the Anthropomorphic GenieConnect Companion Robot During Lockdown of the COVID19 Pandemic

Rachel Wilson, Imogen Keane, Ray Jones

Year
2022
Citations
6

Abstract

Anthropomorphic robots may reduce loneliness in older people, however, acceptance is requisite for adoption. We collected the experiences of 10 people aged 80–92 who used a pre-market social robot, GenieConnect, for between 2 to 35 days during the COVID19 pandemic restrictions. GenieConnect is a table-top robot with a large face and animated eyes, designed for support and companionship. The robot asked ‘how are you feeling, Name’ each day and delivered lifestyle prompts such as medication reminders. We observed conflicting responses from participants - five expressed positive responses, three negative (two of these withdrew) and two neutral. Positive comments included ‘feeling not alone’; ‘having someone to talk to’; and enjoying being asked ‘how are you feeling’. Negative comments were mainly related to not liking the eyes. Design adaptations were made to increase acceptance. We conclude that robots like GenieConnect could reduce loneliness when a user-centred design approach is taken.

Keywords

LonelinessFeelingRobotPsychologyPandemicSocial isolationSocial robotCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Social psychologyApplied psychology

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