Back to School - Sustaining Recurring Child-Robot Educational Interactions After a Long Break

Mike E.U. Ligthart, Simone M. De Droog, Marianne Bossema, Lamia Elloumi, Mirjam de Haas, Matthijs H.J. Smakman, Koen V. Hindriks, Somaya Ben Allouch

Research output: Chapter in Book / Report / Conference proceedingConference contributionAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Maintaining the child-robot relationship after a significant break, such as a holiday, is an important step for developing sustainable social robots for education. We ran a four-session user study (n = 113 children) that included a nine-month break between the third and fourth session. During the study, participants practiced math with the help of a social robot math tutor. We found that social personalization is an effective strategy to better sustain the child-robot relationship than the absence of social personalization. To become reacquainted after the long break, the robot summarizes a few pieces of information it had stored about the child. This gives children a feeling of being remembered, which is a key contributor to the effectiveness of social personalization. Enabling the robot to refer to information previously shared by the child is another key contributor to social personalization. Conditional for its effectiveness, however, is that children notice these memory references. Finally, although we found that children's interest in the tutoring content is related to relationship formation, personalizing the topics did not lead to more interest in the content. It seems likely that not all of the memory information that was used to personalize the content was up-to-date or socially relevant.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationHRI 2024
Subtitle of host publicationProceedings of the 2024 ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction
PublisherACM Digital Library
Pages433-442
Number of pages10
ISBN (Electronic)9798400703225
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Publication series

NameACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction
ISSN (Electronic)2167-2148

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