41

Faulty Coffees: Barriers to Adoption of an In-the-wild Robo-Barista

Bruce W. Wilson
David A. Robb
Mei Yii Lim
Helen Hastie
Matthew Peter Aylett
Theodoros Georgiou
Main:4 Pages
1 Figures
Bibliography:1 Pages
Abstract

We set out to study whether task-based narratives could influence long-term engagement with a service robot. To do so, we deployed a Robo-Barista for five weeks in an over-50's housing complex in Stockton, England. Residents received a free daily coffee by interacting with a Furhat robot assigned to either a narrative or non-narrative dialogue condition. Despite designing for sustained engagement, repeat interaction was low, and we encountered curiosity trials without retention, technical breakdowns, accessibility barriers, and the social dynamics of a housing complex setting. Rather than treating these as peripheral issues, we foreground them in this paper. We reflect on the in-the-wild realities of our experiment and offer lessons for conducting longitudinal Human-Robot Interaction research when studies unravel in practice.

View on arXiv
Comments on this paper