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A Participatory Design Approach to Designing Educational Interventions for Science Students Using Socially Assistive Robots
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We present here an approach to the deployment of social robots in a science laboratory to monitor the behavior of students with respect to safety regulations to prevent accidents. Our vision is that the social robot should act as a friendly companion for students and encourage them to follow safe laboratory practices. Towards this goal, we developed a Laboratory Safety Assistant Framework (LSA) using a Misty II Plus robot and designed three dashboards within it as interventions. This LSA framework was evaluated using a participatory design (PD) study with twenty university students (eleven from Japan and nine from Egypt). For this study, we designed a questionnaire that contains 42 questions on the prior knowledge of students about socially assistive robots and their expectations about how socially assistive robots can create a secure environment in the scientific laboratory. The chi-square test revealed that there are no differences between groups in their perceptions of using Misty II to achieve safety inside science laboratories. In their perception of the capabilities of social robots and the sharing of feelings, students believe that using social robots like Misty II inside the science laboratory can make the lab safe and decrease risk inside the science laboratory without using the three dashboards of the LSA framework. However, the Wilcoxon signed-rank test revealed that there is a significant improvement in students’ perceptions ((Median = 106.5, Z = −2.39, p < 0.05, r = 0.53)) between students’ expectations of using social robots to achieve safety in scientific laboratories before and after they interacted with the social robot and knew about the feasibility of the three dashboards we designed. Furthermore, the t-test revealed participants’ experiences of sharing feelings with a social robot, and the intervention suggested by the LSA framework was to design a system integrating this into a social robot to enhance safety within the scientific laboratory (t (19) = 3.39, p = 0.003).
Title: A Participatory Design Approach to Designing Educational Interventions for Science Students Using Socially Assistive Robots
Description:
We present here an approach to the deployment of social robots in a science laboratory to monitor the behavior of students with respect to safety regulations to prevent accidents.
Our vision is that the social robot should act as a friendly companion for students and encourage them to follow safe laboratory practices.
Towards this goal, we developed a Laboratory Safety Assistant Framework (LSA) using a Misty II Plus robot and designed three dashboards within it as interventions.
This LSA framework was evaluated using a participatory design (PD) study with twenty university students (eleven from Japan and nine from Egypt).
For this study, we designed a questionnaire that contains 42 questions on the prior knowledge of students about socially assistive robots and their expectations about how socially assistive robots can create a secure environment in the scientific laboratory.
The chi-square test revealed that there are no differences between groups in their perceptions of using Misty II to achieve safety inside science laboratories.
In their perception of the capabilities of social robots and the sharing of feelings, students believe that using social robots like Misty II inside the science laboratory can make the lab safe and decrease risk inside the science laboratory without using the three dashboards of the LSA framework.
However, the Wilcoxon signed-rank test revealed that there is a significant improvement in students’ perceptions ((Median = 106.
5, Z = −2.
39, p < 0.
05, r = 0.
53)) between students’ expectations of using social robots to achieve safety in scientific laboratories before and after they interacted with the social robot and knew about the feasibility of the three dashboards we designed.
Furthermore, the t-test revealed participants’ experiences of sharing feelings with a social robot, and the intervention suggested by the LSA framework was to design a system integrating this into a social robot to enhance safety within the scientific laboratory (t (19) = 3.
39, p = 0.
003).
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