Towards Emotion Co-regulation with LLM-powered Socially Assistive Robots: Integrating LLM Prompts and Robotic Behaviors to Support Parent-Neurodivergent Child Dyads
Jing Li, Felix Schijve, Sheng Li, Yuye Yang, Jun Hu, Emilia Barakova

TL;DR
This paper presents an LLM-powered social robot designed to support emotion co-regulation between parents and neurodivergent children, demonstrating positive interaction impacts and outlining future design considerations.
Contribution
It introduces an integrated LLM and robotic system on MiRo-E for tailored emotion regulation interventions in parent-child dyads with neurodevelopmental disorders.
Findings
Positive impact on interaction dynamics
Potential to facilitate emotion regulation
Identified design and technical challenges
Abstract
Socially Assistive Robotics (SAR) has shown promise in supporting emotion regulation for neurodivergent children. Recently, there has been increasing interest in leveraging advanced technologies to assist parents in co-regulating emotions with their children. However, limited research has explored the integration of large language models (LLMs) with SAR to facilitate emotion co-regulation between parents and children with neurodevelopmental disorders. To address this gap, we developed an LLM-powered social robot by deploying a speech communication module on the MiRo-E robotic platform. This supervised autonomous system integrates LLM prompts and robotic behaviors to deliver tailored interventions for both parents and neurodivergent children. Pilot tests were conducted with two parent-child dyads, followed by a qualitative analysis. The findings reveal MiRo-E's positive impacts on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAutism Spectrum Disorder Research · Social Robot Interaction and HRI · Digital Mental Health Interventions
