TY - JOUR
T1 - Adaptation profiles in first-time robot users
T2 - Towards understanding adaptation patterns and their implications for design
AU - Montalván, Juan
AU - Shin, Heesun
AU - Cuéllar, Francisco
AU - Lee, Kunpyo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Montalván, Shin, Cuéllar, & Lee.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - As the presence in our homes of robotics and other automation technologies increases, the diversity of the contexts in which people adapt to these new technologies also increases significantly. This scenario calls for a better understanding of the contextuality of adaptation in order to reveal how differences in adaptation patterns appear. For this purpose, two countries with different technological conditions, Peru and South Korea, were chosen for study, building on previous research in Europe and the USA. Four Peruvian and four Korean families were each given a robot vacuum cleaner, and their adaptation processes were followed in detail over six months. During this time the researchers visited the families periodically, employing Likert-scale questionnaires, semi-structured interviews and generative tools, and the families contributed through periodical video recordings and social media tools. After a combination of ethnographic interpretation, behavioral analysis and grounded theory procedures, distinctive adaptation patterns, and the main elements influencing them, were identified. Then an adaptation profiles framework (APF) was developed, elaborating on the existing relationships between adaptation patterns and these elements, and five distinctive adaptation profiles were defined. Finally, design implications for improving adaptation were drawn, taking into consideration the multiple forms in which it is manifested.
AB - As the presence in our homes of robotics and other automation technologies increases, the diversity of the contexts in which people adapt to these new technologies also increases significantly. This scenario calls for a better understanding of the contextuality of adaptation in order to reveal how differences in adaptation patterns appear. For this purpose, two countries with different technological conditions, Peru and South Korea, were chosen for study, building on previous research in Europe and the USA. Four Peruvian and four Korean families were each given a robot vacuum cleaner, and their adaptation processes were followed in detail over six months. During this time the researchers visited the families periodically, employing Likert-scale questionnaires, semi-structured interviews and generative tools, and the families contributed through periodical video recordings and social media tools. After a combination of ethnographic interpretation, behavioral analysis and grounded theory procedures, distinctive adaptation patterns, and the main elements influencing them, were identified. Then an adaptation profiles framework (APF) was developed, elaborating on the existing relationships between adaptation patterns and these elements, and five distinctive adaptation profiles were defined. Finally, design implications for improving adaptation were drawn, taking into consideration the multiple forms in which it is manifested.
KW - Adaptation Profiles Framework
KW - Contextuality
KW - Human Adaptation to New Technologies
KW - Multi-Sited Ethnography
KW - Robot Vacuum Cleaners
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85018996076&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85018996076
SN - 1991-3761
VL - 11
SP - 1
EP - 19
JO - International Journal of Design
JF - International Journal of Design
IS - 1
ER -