TY - GEN
T1 - Iva
T2 - 24th European Conference on e-Learning, ECEL 2025
AU - Najm, Aveen
AU - Wei, Haolin
AU - Chew, Esyin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Academic Conferences Limited. All rights reserved.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Traditional child patient care needs human workers, who are limited due wage shortage and other factors. Using technologies such as robotics may be a viable alternative as a care assistant to improve child patients' wellbeing, especially when the UK government is encouraging robotics and artificial intelligence innovation. Literature found positive implications for the use of robotics for child patients, such as social humanoid robots providing emotional support and helping child patients reduce pain, which allows for more possibilities of using social humanoid robots to explore serving child patients. This research aims to develop an effective solution to entertain and comfort child patients who have been negatively impacted by the threatened and declining social care sector. The researchers introduced a new design of the robot - Iva: a playful humanoid robot with educational flare for little patients. Iva is based on the NAO robot's hardware and equipped with various sensors and abilities, such as tactile sensors, facial detection and speech and object recognition, enabling it to interact with children through interactive activities. Iva can perform conversation, games, shows, exercises and more activities, based on the thinking of the child patients' needs and preferences, forms of expression and programming workflow. The whole process emphasised user friendliness and ethical considerations, including data privacy and informed consent. The design, development and testing have been conducted in the novel EUREKA Tokku Zone to ensure ethical integrity. Preliminary testing in a laboratory setting shows all the functions of Iva work correctly for providing multiple interesting activities to let child patients play and relax. In terms of Iva's performance, she is a meaningful robot that contributes to a more positive and supportive environment for children during hospitalisation. Future work contains improvements of Iva's program for a more accessible experience, and the test in the real hospital setting within the Tokku Zones in Wales.
AB - Traditional child patient care needs human workers, who are limited due wage shortage and other factors. Using technologies such as robotics may be a viable alternative as a care assistant to improve child patients' wellbeing, especially when the UK government is encouraging robotics and artificial intelligence innovation. Literature found positive implications for the use of robotics for child patients, such as social humanoid robots providing emotional support and helping child patients reduce pain, which allows for more possibilities of using social humanoid robots to explore serving child patients. This research aims to develop an effective solution to entertain and comfort child patients who have been negatively impacted by the threatened and declining social care sector. The researchers introduced a new design of the robot - Iva: a playful humanoid robot with educational flare for little patients. Iva is based on the NAO robot's hardware and equipped with various sensors and abilities, such as tactile sensors, facial detection and speech and object recognition, enabling it to interact with children through interactive activities. Iva can perform conversation, games, shows, exercises and more activities, based on the thinking of the child patients' needs and preferences, forms of expression and programming workflow. The whole process emphasised user friendliness and ethical considerations, including data privacy and informed consent. The design, development and testing have been conducted in the novel EUREKA Tokku Zone to ensure ethical integrity. Preliminary testing in a laboratory setting shows all the functions of Iva work correctly for providing multiple interesting activities to let child patients play and relax. In terms of Iva's performance, she is a meaningful robot that contributes to a more positive and supportive environment for children during hospitalisation. Future work contains improvements of Iva's program for a more accessible experience, and the test in the real hospital setting within the Tokku Zones in Wales.
KW - Child Patients
KW - Child-Robot Interaction
KW - Healthcare Robot
KW - Hospital Robots
KW - Robot Programming
KW - Social Robots
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105030146071
U2 - 10.34190/ecel.24.1.4015
DO - 10.34190/ecel.24.1.4015
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:105030146071
T3 - Proceedings of the European Conference on e-Learning, ECEL
SP - 418
EP - 429
BT - Proceedings of the 24th European Conference on e-Learning, ECEL 2025
A2 - Khalid, Saifuddin
PB - Academic Conferences and Publishing International Limited
Y2 - 23 October 2025 through 24 October 2025
ER -