Print Email Facebook Twitter Interaction Design Patterns for Social Robot Assistance of Moral Decisions in Healthcare Title Interaction Design Patterns for Social Robot Assistance of Moral Decisions in Healthcare: Confrontation with Resuscitation Dilemmas Author JAISHANKAR, SUJIT (TU Delft Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science; TU Delft Interactive Intelligence) Contributor Neerincx, M.A. (mentor) Oertel, Catharine (graduation committee) Santoni De Sio, F. (graduation committee) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Corporate name Delft University of Technology Programme Computer Science | Data Science and Technology Date 2020-09-29 Abstract The implementation of social robots in the healthcare industry is becoming substantial as a consequence of the scarcity of healthcare professionals, rising costs of healthcare and an increase in the number of vulnerable populations. Social robots will be deployed, in increasing numbers, in assisting health care professionals during the provision of care to patients. While research in Human-Robot-Interaction (HRI) has investigated mechanisms for making decisions taken by artificial agents more ethical, there is limited work done in investigating adaptations to HRI that promotes ethical behaviour on the human-side. Moral dilemmas can appear when decisions have to be made regarding patientcare. Dealing with them can be challenging for healthcare professionals since the impact of decisions affect multiple parties and involves different considerations and value-trade-offs of the involved people. There are different approaches in which healthcare professionals can be confronted with moral dilemmas. Based on decision making principles, a robot might assist the health care professionals in ethical decision making with an appropriate reflection or confrontation of the dilemma. This thesis investigates how a social robot can confront a professional with a moral dilemma and what the associated effects are. Following the Socio-Cognitive Engineering (SCE) method, two alternative proto-patterns are created for dilemma confrontation by a robot in a resuscitation scenario: Verbal and Multi-modal confrontation. In such a scenario, the robot displays protests of distress and affect in order to help the professionals carry out systematic reflection of the moral dilemmas they experience. In an evaluation, it is tested whether these confrontation patterns are being perceived as intended, comparing the two confrontation patterns with a neutral scenario. Subject human robot interactionEthicsdilemmadecision making To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:c34c01c8-681a-469e-9e5b-f729f040f916 Embargo date 2020-09-29 Part of collection Student theses Document type master thesis Rights © 2020 SUJIT JAISHANKAR Files PDF Thesis_Sujit_Shankar.pdf 2.01 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:c34c01c8-681a-469e-9e5b-f729f040f916/datastream/OBJ/view