Changes for page 3. Evaluation Methods
Last modified by William OGrady on 2024/04/08 22:22
From version 37.1
edited by Jean-Paul Smit
on 2024/03/26 11:59
on 2024/03/26 11:59
Change comment:
There is no comment for this version
To version 31.1
edited by William OGrady
on 2024/03/25 14:33
on 2024/03/25 14:33
Change comment:
There is no comment for this version
Summary
-
Page properties (2 modified, 0 added, 0 removed)
-
Attachments (0 modified, 0 added, 2 removed)
Details
- Page properties
-
- Author
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,1 @@ 1 -xwiki:XWiki. jeanpaulsmit1 +xwiki:XWiki.WilliamOGrady - Content
-
... ... @@ -4,26 +4,26 @@ 4 4 5 5 ==== ==== 6 6 7 -== //**Study design variables**// ==7 +== //**Study design claims**// == 8 8 9 -The study will hypothesize on the followingvariableswith regards tothesystem:9 +The study will investigate the claims on the following questions: 10 10 11 +~1. **Autonomy. **Does the design increase the sense of //autonomy //in a PwD? 11 11 12 -1. **Autonomy. **Does the design increase the sense of //autonomy //in a PwD? 13 -1. **Relatedness. **Does the design positively affect the PwD's //affective //state? 14 -11. **Affect**. How do participants feel about using the robot in this state? 15 -11. **Attitude towards Technology**. How do people think about using technology? Are they biased towards the robot before the study? 16 -1. **Competence. **Is the design //competent//; is the design capable enough for the PwD to rely on it? 17 -11. **Memory self-efficacy **(pre-study) How good are participants at remembering information? 18 -11. **Memory recall **(post-study) Can the participant accurately retrieve information through the robot? 13 +2. **Relatedness. **Does the design positively affect the PwD's //affective //state? Do PwDs //like// the system? 19 19 20 - 15 +3. **Competence. **Is the design //dependable//; is the design accessible enough for the PwD to rely on it? Does it feel natural? 21 21 22 - Forasamplesizeassmallas 20participants, itis most adequate to applyawithin-subjectsdesign(theyrequirefewerparticipants)[1]. Thatmeans thereis an approach whereevery PwDis experiencingall ofthe conditionsexamined. A within-subjectsdesignmightbe pronetoconfoundssuchaspre-existingnotionsinthe environment. Thatis whytheattitude towards robots and the pre-study sense of affect and autonomy should be examined and evaluated as such.17 +4. **Memory self-efficacy** and **Recall**.(pre-study) How good are participants at remembering information? (post-study) Can the participant accurately retrieve information through the robot? 23 23 24 - [[image:Socio-CognitiveEngineering-Frame1(4).jpg]]19 +5. **Attitude towards Technology**. How do people think about using technology? Are they biased towards the robot before the study? 25 25 26 26 27 - ==//**References**//==22 +For a sample size as small as 20 participants, it is most adequate to apply a within-subjects design (they require fewer participants) [1]. That means there is an approach where every PwD is experiencing all of the conditions examined. A within-subjects design might be prone to confounds such as pre-existing notions in the environment. That is why the attitude towards robots and the pre-study sense of affect and autonomy should be examined and evaluated as such. Another confounder variable to look into is the study location and environment. 28 28 24 +[[image:Socio-Cognitive Engineering - Frame 1.jpg]] 25 + 26 + 27 +== References == 28 + 29 29 [1] Bethel, C.L., Henkel, Z., Baugus, K. (2020). Conducting Studies in Human-Robot Interaction. In: Jost, C., //et al.// Human-Robot Interaction. Springer Series on Bio- and Neurosystems, vol 12. Springer, Cham. https:~/~/doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-42307-0_4
- Socio-Cognitive Engineering - Frame 1(2).jpg
-
- Author
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -xwiki:XWiki.jeanpaulsmit - Size
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -2.1 MB - Content
- Socio-Cognitive Engineering - Frame 1(4).jpg
-
- Author
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -xwiki:XWiki.jeanpaulsmit - Size
-
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -2.2 MB - Content