New robotic tutor can tell when students are bored! : The Tribune India

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New robotic tutor can tell when students are bored!

LONDON:Scientists have developed a new robot teacher that can detect whether children are distracted in class and accordingly respond to encourage them.

New robotic tutor can tell when students are bored!

Photo source: Thinkstock



London, October 25

Scientists have developed a new robot teacher that can detect whether children are distracted in class and accordingly respond to encourage them.

Luis Imbernon Cuadrado and colleagues at the Department of Artificial Intelligence in Madrid have developed an integrated computational architecture (ARTIE) for use with software applications in schools.

"The main goal of our work was to design a system that can detect the emotional state of primary school children interacting with educational software and make pedagogic interventions with a robot tutor that can ultimately improve the learning experience," said Cuadrado.

Online educational resources are becoming increasingly common in the classroom, although they have not taken into sufficient account that the learning ability of primary school children is particularly sensitive to their emotional state.

This is perhaps where robot tutors can step in to assist teachers, researchers said.

Rather than focusing on specific emotions, the researchers first identified three cognitive states (concentrating, distracted and inactive) known to influence the course of learning.

Keyboard strokes and mouse actions of children using educational software were used to predict which of these cognitive states the child is experiencing and subsequently linked to an algorithm that chooses the correct form of pedagogic intervention.

These could be words and gestures of encouragement or attempts to raise interest and motivation for a specific learning objective, all of which can be delivered by a robot tutor.

Researchers describe an example of a robotic tutor platform, MONICA, which integrates an educational software to a commercially available robot through the computational architecture they developed.

MONICA was tested out on two primary school volunteers known to have different cognitive learning states.

Whilst the children enjoyed having a robot guide their learning, and preferred it to working alone, they both felt they would have learned more with their normal teacher, despite feeling more relaxed in the presence of a robot tutor.

"Our first prototype was designed to demonstrate that the architecture works in detecting simplified emotional states," said Cuadrado.

"The next step will be to implement methods for detecting a more complex range of emotions with cameras and microphones and to test the longer term impact of robot tutors on children's learning curves," he said.

The study was published in the journal Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience. — PTI

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