Paper ID: 2409.16899

Robotic Backchanneling in Online Conversation Facilitation: A Cross-Generational Study

Sota Kobuki, Katie Seaborn, Seiki Tokunaga, Kosuke Fukumori, Shun Hidaka, Kazuhiro Tamura, Koji Inoue, Tatsuya Kawahara, Mihoko Otake-Mastuura

Japan faces many challenges related to its aging society, including increasing rates of cognitive decline in the population and a shortage of caregivers. Efforts have begun to explore solutions using artificial intelligence (AI), especially socially embodied intelligent agents and robots that can communicate with people. Yet, there has been little research on the compatibility of these agents with older adults in various everyday situations. To this end, we conducted a user study to evaluate a robot that functions as a facilitator for a group conversation protocol designed to prevent cognitive decline. We modified the robot to use backchannelling, a natural human way of speaking, to increase receptiveness of the robot and enjoyment of the group conversation experience. We conducted a cross-generational study with young adults and older adults. Qualitative analyses indicated that younger adults perceived the backchannelling version of the robot as kinder, more trustworthy, and more acceptable than the non-backchannelling robot. Finally, we found that the robot's backchannelling elicited nonverbal backchanneling in older participants.

Submitted: Sep 25, 2024