1. User feedback and remote supervision for assisted living with mobile robots: A field study in long-term autonomy.
- Author
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Luperto, Matteo, Romeo, Marta, Monroy, Javier, Renoux, Jennifer, Vuono, Alessandro, Moreno, Francisco-Angel, Gonzalez-Jimenez, Javier, Basilico, Nicola, and Borghese, N. Alberto
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CONGREGATE housing , *AUTONOMOUS robots , *OLDER people , *MOBILE robots , *FIELD research , *ELDER care - Abstract
In an ageing society, the at-home use of Socially Assistive Robots (SARs) could provide remote monitoring of their users' well-being, together with physical and psychological support. However, private home environments are particularly challenging for SARs, due to their unstructured and dynamic nature which often contributes to robots' failures. For this reason, even though several prototypes of SARs for elderly care have been developed, their commercialisation and wide-spread at-home use are yet to be effective. In this paper, we analyse how including the end users' feedback impacts the SARs reliability and acceptance. To do so, we introduce a Monitoring and Logging System (MLS) for remote supervision, which increases the explainability of SAR-based systems deployed in older adults' apartments, while also allowing the exchange of feedback between caregivers, technicians, and older adults. We then present an extensive field study showing how long-term deployment of autonomous SARs can be accomplished by relying on such a feedback loop to address any potential issue. To this end, we provide the results obtained in a 130-week long study where autonomous SARs were deployed in the apartments of 10 older adults, with the aim of possibly serving and assisting future practitioners, with the knowledge collected from this extensive experimental campaign, to fill the gap that currently exists for the widespread adoption of SARs. • Socially assistive robots are promising tools for older adults independent living. • Private apartments are challenging environments, impacting the robustness of robots. • Results from a 130 weeks study in 10 older adults apartments using autonomous robots. • Remote supervision increased the acceptance of socially assistive robots. • Lessons learned from managing a long-term deployment, towards long-term autonomy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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