Changes for page b. Test
Last modified by Demi Breen on 2023/04/09 15:10
From version 50.1
edited by Demi Breen
on 2023/04/07 12:11
on 2023/04/07 12:11
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To version 54.1
edited by Liza Wensink
on 2023/04/07 15:36
on 2023/04/07 15:36
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... ... @@ -79,17 +79,12 @@ 79 79 80 80 == 2.5 Procedure == 81 81 82 -The claims t hat need to be tested are thus:82 +The procedure is as follows: we want the to test the claims mentioned above in the introduction. Therefore we programmed two routes in Choreography: one for the emotion-based motivation test and one for the goal-based motivation. To focus on only these two types of motivations, everything else in the route was kept the same. This is also to make sure that nothing else besides the motivation influences the participant's opinion on taking the walk. 83 83 84 - -The effectofemotion-basedmotivation;ThePwDcancomprehend the emotion that is beingconveyedandin that wayis motivatedto contribute to the activity ofwalkingin thegarden.84 +For the exeperiment we wrote an [[orientation script>>doc:3\. Evaluation.Scenario description.WebHome]] for the participants to introduce them to our design and explain them what they should do and that they should step into the shoes of our persona Bob. Bob is a person with anger issues and dementia. However, the participants did not know whether they are tested with emotion-based or goal-based motivation walk. We also wrote a consent form to ask for their consent to take part in the experiment. One of the main points in the consent from is that they will be recorded. We wanted to record them to re-evaluate all the experiments and see if we missed something. This also helped us with the final results and the discussion. If the participant did not agree, then we of course did not record him/her. 85 85 86 - -Theeffectof goal-based motivation;The PwD can comprehend the goal and end-state of thepromoted activity andin that way is motivatedto contribute to the activity of walkinginthegarden86 +The following happend during an experiment: 87 87 88 -- Whether there is a noticeable difference between emotion-based and goal-based; The PwD can communicate how he/she feels and score the walk. 89 - 90 - 91 -The robot and students need to perform the following tasks: 92 - 93 93 ~1. Pepper will be turned on and will scan/check his environment 94 94 95 95 2. Pepper will look for a face and will turn to the person that he sees ... ... @@ -100,13 +100,13 @@ 100 100 101 101 5. Pepper will start motivating based on the answer that the student gives: 102 102 103 - 5.1 When the student says yes, Pepper will start walking with the student and during the walk will have some small talk 104 -5.2 When the student says no, Pepper will start the motivational part of the experiment. For the first experiment Pepper will use emotion-based motivation and for the second experiment Pepper will use the goal-based motivation 105 -5.3 If the student then decides to say yes, then Pepper will start walking with the student and during the walk will have some small talk 106 -6. After the walk/activity is finished Pepper will thank the student and will state again how important it is to stay active 98 + 5a. When the student says yes, Pepper will start walking with the student and during the walk will have some small talk 99 + 5b. When the student says no, Pepper will start the motivational part of the experiment. For the first experiment Pepper will use emotion-based motivation and for the second experiment Pepper will use the goal-based motivation 100 + 5c. If the student then decides to say yes, then Pepper will start walking with the student and during the walk will have some small talk 107 107 108 - 7.Then the student isasked to answer some questions to evaluatethe experience.102 +During the experiment, one of us wrote down observations of the experiment and another one recoreded the experiment if allowed. We had also prepared a questionnaire to measure our claims, which we talked about in details in the measures section. All the participants had to fill in these questionnaire after the experiment. We wanted to make sure that we had an equal amount of both types of tests to get an unbiased result. Hence, we finished the evaluation once we had a relatively good and equal amount of experiments. 109 109 104 + 110 110 == 2.6 Material == 111 111 112 112 The material needed for this experiment is of course the Pepper robot. We also need a laptop to run the robot. ... ... @@ -140,40 +140,28 @@ 140 140 141 141 As the robot's speech recognition could only understand single words due to its implementation, this resulted in numerous occasions where a participant was not understood and had to repeat themselves. It also occurred that the robot understood 'yes' when 'no' was said. 142 142 143 - - Mention something about only one participantgoinginto Bob'scharacter fully?And that he mentioned that the "no" he was giving was more attention-seeking than a real no.138 +In total during all of the evaluations performed, only one participant went into the Bob persona fully, which was described for the participant in the orientation script. He mentioned that the "no" he was giving during the test was more attention-seeking than a real no to the walk, which is a very useful observation. 144 144 145 - -Addthatsometimes the robot cut participants off,if they were speaking slower or elaborating on their answers.140 +In a couple of the evaluations, it happened that the robot cut participants off mid-sentence once it had recognized a word that was spoken if they were speaking slower or elaborating on their answers. This is not ideal for a future and complete design and definitely would be something that needs to be worked on. 146 146 147 147 148 148 149 149 = 4. Discussion = 150 150 151 - -In terms of the research question, no significant differences were found.Itcouldbe that this is true in general,butit isverylikely thatthis is influenced bythecircumstancessurroundingthedesign and the evaluation.146 +In terms of the research question, no significant differences were found between the two different motivational methods. This is however very likely influenced by the circumstances surrounding the design and the evaluation. The design is unfortunately rather limited and with limited capabilities, due to time constraints. Speech recognition didn't always work properly and was not as flexible as desired which made the interactions less realistic for the participant. Things such as elaborating, which would be something that would be a natural part of a leisurely conversation were made very difficult as the robot could not comprehend conversation to the fullest extent. Since participants were also prompted to give shorter answers and try to keep to things like "yes" and "no" it greatly influenced how participants interacted with the robot. 152 152 153 - -Thedesignisratherlimitedandwithlimitedcapabilities,due totimeconstraints.Speechrecognitiondidn't alwaysworkproperly and was not asflexible asdesiredwhichmade the interactionslessrealistic for theparticipant.148 +There were also other constraints to the interaction, which had to be given as instructions to the participant before testing. These things included at what distance to stay from the robot, when to join the robot's side when it's time for the walk, how long to wait to speak after a certain prompt, etc. This further made it unnatural but was necessary for the system to perform properly. Ideally, an individual would be able to join the robot's side at any given moment and the robot's movement would not be impacted by the fact that the participant stands too close. Further, one component that has a very significant effect on the results was that it was not possible to test the design with PwD. This was attempted to be resolved by providing a persona description for participants to keep in mind during the testing, but it is difficult to simulate conditions of dementia. Only one participant ended up embodying this character to the fullest extent which was very valuable for the sake of the evaluation but was not enough to explore the concept entirely. 154 154 155 - -Therearealsootherconstraints to the interaction,which have to begivenastructionsto theparticipant before testing,suchas atwhatdistance tostayfromthe robot,when tojoin the robot's side,howlongtowaitto speakafter acertain prompt,etc.This furthermade itunnaturalbutwas necessary for the systemtoperformproperly.150 +This highlights the fact that the results may have been different if participants outside of the course were used since we are all very familiar with these robots and systems. On one hand, it could be positive, since we have all researched dementia and have gained a lot of knowledge within this which could make us better at simulating appropriate behavior with the robot or testing the systems in a reasonable way. But since participants also have an idea of how the robot works prior to the evaluation, based on their own experiences of working with the robot, perhaps some mistakes or issues went undetected. For example, a completely inexperienced user could potentially show other faults in the design that appear only if the system is entirely foreign to the user, which is likely what it would be like with a PwD. Of course, knowing about dementia is not the same thing as actually suffering from the diagnosis, so many aspects have most likely gone undetected there for that reason also. 156 156 157 - -Since participants were also promptedtogiveshorteranswersandtrytokeep to things like"yes"and"no"itgreatly influenced the wayparticipantsinteracted with the robot.152 +The results could also be influenced by the sheer amount of participants, which concluded at 8 participants per group (8 for the goal-oriented approach, and 8 for the emotional approach). Perhaps with more participants, the results would differ to a greater extent between the two approaches. Due to time constraints, it was not possible to include more participants in this particular study. Further, participants who started the interaction with a pre-disposed idea of what they wanted to do, like the participant mentioned above in the "Observations" section, definitely influenced the outcome, since this was no longer about listening to the prompts the robot was giving but more so acting according to a pre-disposed agenda. 158 158 159 - - Further,itwas(obviously)notpossible totestthedesignwithPwD.Thiswas attemptedtobe resolvedby providinga personadescriptionforparticipantstokeep in mindduring the testing.Onlyoneparticipantendedupembodyingthischaracter.154 +It is also highly interesting to consider if participants are perhaps inclined to be positive in general, particularly because the users are other students of the course who tend to want to stay positive towards their peers and therefore feel inclined to reply positively or give positive feedback to the study overall. This could cloud the results, while it is still understandable behavior given the context. 160 160 161 - -Results mayhavebeendifferent ifparticipantsutsideofthecoursewereusedsince we areveryfamiliarwiththeserobotsandsystems. Onnehanditcouldbepositive,sincewe haveall researcheddementiaandhavegaineda lot of knowledgewithinthis wecouldbe betteratsimulatingappropriatebehaviourwiththerobot or testingthesystemsina reasonableway.Butsinceparticipantsalsohavean ideafhow the robotworksperhaps some mistakes orssues wentundetectedwhich could have appearedwithindividualsthatare notfamiliar with the robot. Of course,knowing aboutdementia isnot thesamethingasactually suffering fromthediagnosis,so manyaspectshavemostlikelygoneundetected there.156 +A rather central aspect is also of course that the robot should really take a walk outside and not inside the lab room. Preferably, the test should have been performed in an actual garden in order to be able to assess its capabilities in the appropriate terrain. This would also make it possible to make the walk more elaborate and longer since observations during the evaluation show that participants would have rather had a longer and more extensive walk, which was not possible in the lab environment. 162 162 163 - -Results could alsobe influenced by the sheeramount of participants, which concluded at8participantspergroup(8for thegoal-orientedapproach, and8forthe emotional approach).Perhapswith more participants,the results woulddiffer to a greaterextent between the two approaches.Due tomeconstraints,itwas notpossible to includemoreparticipants.158 +In future studies, the number of participants should be considered, as well as testing the design on PwD and in an actual garden or at the very least a bigger space. The walk should preferably be more extensive and perhaps incorporate aspects of the garden or the environment into the conversation to make the experience more immersing, for example by referring to the flowers that are blooming in the garden and trying to draw PwD's attention to these aspects and create conversations from this. Hopefully, adjustments like these would improve the overall quality of the walk. Further improvements to speech recognition are needed, as well as the smoothness of the walking and the aspect of the participant's distance to the robot. Perhaps if the less realistic aspects discussed above are minimized, a robot that feels more realistic would result in participants listening to the actual prompts given to a larger extent, rather than going into the experiment with a predisposed idea of what they are going to do or answer and would also perhaps deter the participants from tending to reply positively. Further, the motivational prompts were certainly customized to the persona, but further customization could have been considered. For example, it would of course be far greater if the robot has some ability to adapt to the conversation more or less "in real time" by taking in the information given by the PwD and replying in an appropriate manner. Further, intonation could be interpreted and perhaps also shape the responses and prompts of the robot. These things are rather difficult and due to limitations in the current hardware and software may be hard to implement, but it is essential to consider these aspects for future work. 164 164 165 -- Further participants who started the interaction with a pre-disposed idea of what they wanted to do, like the participant mentioned above in the results section, definitely influenced the outcome, since this was no longer about listening to the prompts the robot was giving. 166 - 167 -- Interesting to consider if participants are perhaps inclined to be positive, or feel like they need to be in such a project evaluation and if ideas like these also ended up affecting the outcome. ? 168 - 169 -- Normally, a robot should really take a walk outside. It should have been tested how a robot will do in an actual garden, totally another surface then the room we did the experiment. Unfortunately, we could not do that, because we are not allowed to move th robot from the room. 170 - 171 -- In future studies the amount of participants should be considered, as well as testing the design on PwD and in a garden. Further improvements to the speech recognition are needed, as well as the smoothness of the walking and the distances travelled and the aspect of the participant's distance to the robot. Perhaps if the less realistic aspects discussed above are minimized, a robot that feels more realistic would result in participants listening to the actual prompts given, rather than going into the experiment with a predisposed idea of what they are going to do or answer and would also perhaps deter the participants from tending to reply positively. 172 - 173 - 174 -**ADD FUTURE WORK** 175 - 176 - 177 177 = 5. Conclusions = 178 178 179 179 Both systems were deemed enjoyable and fascinating, and little rejections were made to both types of persuasions. No significant difference was found in any of the measures between the two groups.