cixd creative interaction design lab.

Conversational Agents for Empowering People with Special Needs

2019 - 2021

Voice-based Conversational Agents (VCA) have served as personal assistants that support individuals with special needs, such as children, elders, or people with disabilities. Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) may also benefit from VCAs to deal with their everyday needs and challenges, ranging from self-care to social communications. We explored how VCAs could encourage adolescents with ASD in navigating various aspects of their daily lives through the two-week use of VCAs and a series of participatory design workshops. Our findings demonstrated that VCAs could be an engaging, empowering, emancipating tool that supports adolescents with ASD to address their needs, personalities, and expectations, such as promoting self-care skills, regulating negative emotions, and practicing conversational skills. We propose implications of using off-the-shelf technologies as a personal assistant to autistic users in Assistive Technology design. We suggest design implications for promoting positive opportunities while mitigating the remaining challenges of VCAs for adolescents with ASD.

  • Exploring the Use of a Voice-based Conversational Agent to Empower Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder

    Cha, I., Kim, S., Hong, H., Yoo, H., and Lim, Y., "Exploring the Use of a Voice-based Conversational Agent to Empower Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder," Proceedings of CHI 2021, ACM Press, (Virtual Conference, May 7-16), pp.1-15.
    Abstract

    Voice-based Conversational Agents (VCA) have served as personal assistants that support individuals with special needs. Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) may also benefit from VCAs to deal with their everyday needs and challenges, ranging from self-care to social communications. In this study, we explored how VCAs could encourage adolescents with ASD in navigating various aspects of their daily lives through the two-week use of VCAs and a series of participatory design workshops. Our findings demonstrated that VCAs could be an engaging, empowering, emancipating tool that supports adolescents with ASD to address their needs, personalities, and expectations, such as promoting self-care skills, regulating negative emotions, and practicing conversational skills. We propose implications of using off-the-shelf technologies as a personal assistant to ASD users in Assistive Technology design. We suggest design implications for promoting positive opportunities while mitigating the remaining challenges of VCAs for adolescents with ASD.