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What older People Expect of Robots: A Mixed Methods Approach

Author

Editor

  • Guido Herrmann

Summary, in English

This paper focuses on how older people in Sweden imagine the potential role of robots in their lives. The data collection involved mixed methods, including focus groups, a workshop, a questionnaire and interviews. The findings obtained and lessons learnt from one method fed into another. In total, 88 older people were involved. The results indicate that the expectations and preconceptions about robots are multi-dimensional and ambivalent. Ambivalence can been seen in the tension between the benefits of having a robot looking after the older people, helping with or carrying out tasks they no longer are able to do, and the parallel attitudes, resilience and relational inequalities that accompany these benefits. The participants perceived that having a robot might be “good for others but not themselves”, “good as a machine not a friend” while their relatives and informal caregivers perceived a robot as “not for my relative but for other older people”.

Publishing year

2013

Language

English

Pages

19-29

Publication/Series

Lecture Notes in Computer Science

Volume

8239

Document type

Conference paper

Publisher

Springer

Topic

  • Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

Keywords

  • expectations
  • robots
  • Older people

Conference name

Social Robotics, 5th International Conference, ICSR 2013

Conference date

2013-10-27 - 2013-10-29

Conference place

Bristol, United Kingdom

Status

Published