Dorothy Wong’s research while affiliated with University of Washington and other places

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Publications (1)


a EMAR V2 Prototype (left), b view of student researcher from internal camera (right)
Examples of EMAR V2’s touchscreen
EMAR V2 finite state machine
Examples of EMAR V2’s eye expressions; interested/listening (top left), waiting (top right), happy (bottom left), sad (bottom right)
Observational interaction study design setup

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Can We Keep Him Forever? Teens’ Engagement and Desire for Emotional Connection with a Social Robot
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

January 2020

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325 Reads

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61 Citations

International Journal of Social Robotics

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Andrew Davidson

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[...]

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Dorothy Wong

Today’s teens will most likely be the first generation to spend a lifetime living and interacting with both mechanical and social robots. Although human–robot interaction has been explored in children, adults, and seniors, examination of teen–robot interaction has been limited. In this paper, we provide evidence that teen–robot interaction is a unique area of inquiry and designing for teens is categorically different from other types of human–robot interaction. Using human-centered design, our team is developing a social robot to gather stress and mood data from teens in a public high school. To better understand teen–robot interaction, we conducted an interaction study in the wild to explore and capture teens’ interactions with a low-fidelity social robot prototype. Then, through group interviews we gathered data regarding their perceptions about social robots. Although we anticipated minimal engagement due to the low fidelity of our prototype, teens showed strong engagement and lengthy interactions. Additionally, teens expressed thoughtful articulations of how a social robot could be emotionally supportive. We conclude the paper by discussing future areas for consideration when designing for teen–robot interaction.

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Citations (1)


... The study was conducted on 45 high school students who were asked to interact with the robot. This led to interesting results categorised into empathy and anthropomorphising related to participant comfort and emotional attachment to the robot [5]. This bears relevance for Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) research, exploring supportive platforms for self-disclosure, such as HIV status disclosure using the hookup app Grindr [71] or online forums as a mediating resource for male fertility issues [56]. ...

Reference:

Facing LLMs: Robot Communication Styles in Mediating Health Information between Parents and Young Adults
Can We Keep Him Forever? Teens’ Engagement and Desire for Emotional Connection with a Social Robot

International Journal of Social Robotics