Exercising with an "Iron Man": Design for a Robot Exercise Coach for Persons with Dementia
Martin Cooney, Jacob Pihl, Hanna Larsson, Abbas Orand, Eren Erdal, Aksoy

TL;DR
This paper presents a robot exercise coach designed for persons with dementia, focusing on recognizing behaviors and providing engaging, tailored feedback to support therapeutic exercise routines.
Contribution
It introduces a novel multimodal robot coaching system for dementia patients and reports on user feedback from a Baxter robot prototype.
Findings
The robot can recognize behaviors and provide feedback.
User feedback confirms the scenario's usefulness.
Feedback can be tailored for attentiveness or fun.
Abstract
Socially assistive robots are increasingly being designed to interact with humans in various therapeutical scenarios. We believe that one useful scenario is providing exercise coaching for Persons with Dementia (PwD), which involves unique challenges related to memory and communication. We present a design for a robot that can seek to help a PWD to conduct exercises by recognizing behaviors and providing feedback, in an online, multimodal, and engaging way. Additionally, in line with a mid-fidelity prototyping approach, we report on some feedback from an exploratory user study using a Baxter robot, which provided some confirmation of the usefulness of the general scenario; furthermore, the results suggested the degree of a robot's feedback could be tailored to provide impressions of attentiveness or fun. Limitations and possibilities for future improvement are outlined, touching on deep…
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