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    Young carers on social robots: introducing teenagers as informal caregivers to HRI

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    Authors
    Tanqueray, Laetitia
    Papadopoulos, Chris
    Larsson, Stefan
    Winkle, Katie
    Issue Date
    2025-04-30
    Subjects
    informal caregivers
    teenage-robot interaction
    focus groups
    human-robot interaction
    young carers
    
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    This paper presents a participatory, qualitative focus group study with 13 young carers - young people between 13 to 18 years old who take care of a parent due to either a chronic illness, mental health problem, or other condition connected with a need for care in Wales and England. We identify and assert young carers as an important, thus far unconsidered, user group in Human-Robot Interaction (HRI). As such, this study is the first to explore this group's unique perspectives, highlighting their lived experiences and perceptions of care robots in the domestic setting. Our findings reveal the heterogeneity of this group, particularly regarding support for their caregiving roles and their ongoing use of technology. While participants saw social robots as having potential, especially for (i) time management, (ii) emotional and (iii) informational support, and (iv) monitoring their parent's health; concerns were raised about issues such as (1) malfunction, (2) limited range, (3) privacy and (4) cost. We distil our findings into some reflections on how future HRI research might better consider this important user group, including some methodological reflections on the practical, ethical and emotional challenges of undertaking this type of work.
    Citation
    Tanqueray L, Papadopoulos C, Larsson S, Winkle K (2025) 'Young carers on social robots: introducing teenagers as informal caregivers to HRI', 20th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) - Melbourne, IEEE Computer Society.
    Publisher
    IEEE Computer Society
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10547/626822
    DOI
    10.1109/HRI61500.2025.10973802
    Additional Links
    https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10973802
    Type
    Conference papers, meetings and proceedings
    Language
    en
    ISBN
    9798350378931
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1109/HRI61500.2025.10973802
    Scopus Count
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    Health

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