Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Robots as caregivers


I am reading an article in the November 2nd issue of the New Yorker that talks about the future of robots being caregivers. It's written by Dr. Jerome Groopman, and the piece is called ""Robots that Care: Advances in technological therapy." The piece talks about robot researchers at the University of Southern California developing robots who assist patients recovering from strokes as well as working with Alzheimer patients. It's a fascinating piece, especially when it talks about how robots, as caregivers, need to be different with patients who are introverted versus extroverted. Maya Mataric is the lead scientist. Here's her take on it:

Mataric concluded that, as with human caregivers, temperament would be a key factor. The robots would need to be able to judge whether a patient was introverted or extroverted, and know how to respond in the appropriate manner.

To test their theory, Mataric and her team categorized the personalities of healthy volunteers, using the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire, and observed their responses to robots that were programmed to behave as introverts or extroverts. A robot’s degree of sociability was defined by how far it positioned itself from the patient, the speed of its movements, and its type of communication. For people who were more extroverted, Mataric programmed the robot to move close. “We are not talking sociopathically close, because we always maintain three to four feet of
safety distance between the user and the robot,” she explained. “But, with the extroverted robots, they move into your area, and talk with a slightly higher pitch, more words per unit time, and they say things that are more forceful,
like ‘Come on, you can do three more. I know you can do better than that.’ ” The more introverted robots were programmed to stay farther away from the user, to gesticulate less, and to speak with a slightly lower pitch and at a slower tempo. “You don’t want to make the introversion glaring,” Mataric said. The introverted robots also said more soothing things and offered more praise.

To read the whole article go to "Robots that Care," New Yorker, November 2, 2009

Thursday, October 15, 2009

The Fun Theory

The Fun Theory:

Monday, September 21, 2009

The Today Show on October 8th



We wanted everyone to hear it here first. John is set to appear on The Today Show with his wife, Sharon Rapoport, on Thursday, October 8th, to talk about his book. Hope you can tune in.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Stand by Her's mission

My book, Stand by Her: A Breast Cancer Guide for Men is for and about men whose loved ones have been diagnosed with breast cancer. It is for husbands, fathers, sons, brothers, friends, co-workers; in other words, any and all guys who are trying to figure out what to do for their wives, daughters, moms, sisters, friends and coworkers. And that's a lot of guys. One out of eight women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in their lifetimes. So if every guy has a mom, most have a wife or ex, and many more have a sister or daughter, then probably one out of four, or one out of five men, tops, will have someone that close to them be diagnosed. The book is available now for pre-order at Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Stand-Her-Breast-Cancer-Guide/dp/0814413919/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1250007409&sr=8-1. It is also available at Barnes & Noble