CreativeBot: a Creative Storyteller robot to stimulate creativity in children

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Abstract

We present the design and evaluation of a storytelling activity between children and an autonomous robot aiming at nurturing children's creativity. We assessed whether a robot displaying creative behavior will positively impact children's creativity skills in a storytelling context. We developed two models for the robot to engage in the storytelling activity: creative model, where the robot generates creative story ideas, and the non-creative model, where the robot generates non-creative story ideas. We also investigated whether the type of the storytelling interaction will have an impact on children's creativity skills. We used two types of interaction: 1) Collaborative, where the child and the robot collaborate together by taking turns to tell a story. 2) Non-collaborative: where the robot first tells a story to the child and then asks the child to tell it another story. We conducted a between-subjects study with 103 children in four different conditions: Creative collaborative, Non-creative collaborative, Creative non-collaborative and Non-Creative non-collaborative. The children's stories were evaluated according to the four standard creativity variables: fluency, flexibility, elaboration and originality. Results emphasized that children who interacted with a creative robot showed higher creativity during the interaction than children who interacted with a non-creative robot. Nevertheless, no significant effect of the type of the interaction was found on children's creativity skills. Our findings are significant to the Child-Robot interaction (cHRI) community since they enrich the scientific understanding of the development of child-robot encounters for educational applications.

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APA

Elgarf, M., Zojaji, S., Skantze, G., & Peters, C. (2022). CreativeBot: a Creative Storyteller robot to stimulate creativity in children. In ACM International Conference Proceeding Series (pp. 540–548). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3536221.3556578

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