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Curiosity is key to learning, yet school children show wide variability in their eagerness to acquire information. Recent research suggests that other people have a strong influence on children's exploratory behavior. Would a curious robot elicit children's exploration and the desire to find out new things? In order to answer this question we designed a novel experimental paradigm in which a child plays an education tablet app with an autonomous social robot, which is portrayed as a younger peer. We manipulated the robot's behavior to be either curiosity-driven or not and measured the child's curiosity after the interaction. We show that some of the child's curiosity measures are significantly higher after interacting with a curious robot, compared to a non-curious one, while others do not. These results suggest that interacting with an autonomous social curious robot can selectively guide and promote children's curiosity.
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Goren Gordon
Tel Aviv University
Cynthia Breazeal
Human Media
Susan Engel
University of Wollongong
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Williams College
Human Media
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Gordon et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0f96f501be78fe815fdb7e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/2696454.2696469
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