Changes for page 3. Evaluation Methods
Last modified by William OGrady on 2024/04/08 22:22
From version 37.2
edited by Jean-Paul Smit
on 2024/03/26 15:44
on 2024/03/26 15:44
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To version 37.1
edited by Jean-Paul Smit
on 2024/03/26 11:59
on 2024/03/26 11:59
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... ... @@ -17,6 +17,7 @@ 17 17 11. **Memory self-efficacy **(pre-study) How good are participants at remembering information? 18 18 11. **Memory recall **(post-study) Can the participant accurately retrieve information through the robot? 19 19 20 + 20 20 21 21 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. 22 22 ... ... @@ -23,17 +23,6 @@ 23 23 [[image:Socio-Cognitive Engineering - Frame 1(4).jpg]] 24 24 25 25 26 -=== Surveys === 27 - 28 -For autonomy, a validated survey tool is the self-care score as used in the Diabetes research paper of PAL by Neerincx et al. 29 - 30 -Affect can be measured with a button ([[http:~~/~~/ii.tudelft.nl/~~~~joostb/affectbutton_version2_original.html>>url:http://ii.tudelft.nl/~~joostb/affectbutton_version2_original.html]]) that takes less than a minute. It will be used for both pre-experiment and post-experiment evaluation. 31 - 32 -For Attitude towards robots, we build upon the works of [reference] and create a set of two 1-minute questions. 33 - 34 -A well-suited tool for Memory self-efficacy is the Rivermead behavioural memory test [reference]. We adopt it to fit to the ecological validity and domain of interest in our study. 35 - 36 - 37 37 == //**References**// == 38 38 39 39 [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