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  4. Do Children Perceive Whether a Robotic Peer is Learning or Not?
 
conference paper

Do Children Perceive Whether a Robotic Peer is Learning or Not?

Chandra, Shruti  
•
Paradeda, Raul
•
Yin, Hang  
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January 1, 2018
Hri '18: Proceedings Of The 2018 Acm/Ieee International Conference On Human-Robot Interaction
13th Annual ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI)

Social robots are being used to create better educational scenarios, thereby fostering children's learning. In the work presented here, we describe an autonomous social robot that was designed to enhance children's handwriting skills. Exploiting the benefits of the learning-by-teaching method, the system provides a scenario in which a child acts as a teacher and corrects the handwriting difficulties of the robotic agent. To explore the children's perception towards this social robot and the effect on their learning, we have conducted a multi-session study with children that compared two contrasting competencies in the robot: 'learning'vs 'non-learning' and presented as two conditions in the study. The results suggest that the children learned more in the learning condition compared with the non-learning condition and their learning gains seem to be affected by their perception of the robot. The results did not lead to any significant differences in the children's perception of the robot in the first two weeks of interaction. However, by the end of the 4th week, the results changed. The children in the learning condition gave significantly higher writing ability and overall performance scores to the robot compared with the non-learning condition. In addition, the change in the robot's learning capabilities did not show to affect their perceived intelligence, likability and friendliness towards it.

  • Details
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Type
conference paper
DOI
10.1145/3171221.3171274
Web of Science ID

WOS:000460476300008

Author(s)
Chandra, Shruti  
Paradeda, Raul
Yin, Hang  
Dillenbourg, Pierre  
Prada, Rui
Paiva, Ana
Date Issued

2018-01-01

Publisher

ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY

Publisher place

New York

Published in
Hri '18: Proceedings Of The 2018 Acm/Ieee International Conference On Human-Robot Interaction
ISBN of the book

978-1-4503-4953-6

Series title/Series vol.

ACM IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction

Start page

41

End page

49

Subjects

Computer Science, Cybernetics

•

Engineering, Electrical & Electronic

•

Robotics

•

Computer Science

•

Engineering

•

social robotics

•

learning-by-teaching

•

multi-session studies

•

self-efficacy

•

teach

•

interventions

•

tutor

•

write

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
CHILI  
LASA  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
13th Annual ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI)

Chicago, IL

Mar 05-08, 2018

Available on Infoscience
June 18, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/157610
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