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Main Authors: Poprcova, Vesna, Lefter, Iulia, Warnier, Martijn, Brazier, Frances
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.03444
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author Poprcova, Vesna
Lefter, Iulia
Warnier, Martijn
Brazier, Frances
author_facet Poprcova, Vesna
Lefter, Iulia
Warnier, Martijn
Brazier, Frances
contents Social anxiety is a prevalent mental health condition that can significantly impact overall well-being and quality of life. Despite its widespread effects, adequate support or treatment for social anxiety is often insufficient. Advances in technology, particularly in social robotics, offer promising opportunities to complement traditional mental health. As an initial step toward developing effective solutions, it is essential to understand the values that shape what is considered meaningful, acceptable, and helpful. In this study, a participatory design workshop was conducted with mental health academic researchers to elicit the underlying values that should inform the design of socially assistive robots for social anxiety support. Through creative, reflective, and envisioning activities, participants explored scenarios and design possibilities, allowing for systematic elicitation of values, expectations, needs, and preferences related to robot-supported interventions. The findings reveal rich insights into design-relevant values-including adaptivity, acceptance, and efficacy-that are core to support for individuals with social anxiety. This study highlights the significance of a research-led approach to value elicitation, emphasising user-centred and context-aware design considerations in the development of socially assistive robots.
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publishDate 2025
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spellingShingle Value Elicitation for a Socially Assistive Robot Addressing Social Anxiety: A Participatory Design Approach
Poprcova, Vesna
Lefter, Iulia
Warnier, Martijn
Brazier, Frances
Robotics
Social anxiety is a prevalent mental health condition that can significantly impact overall well-being and quality of life. Despite its widespread effects, adequate support or treatment for social anxiety is often insufficient. Advances in technology, particularly in social robotics, offer promising opportunities to complement traditional mental health. As an initial step toward developing effective solutions, it is essential to understand the values that shape what is considered meaningful, acceptable, and helpful. In this study, a participatory design workshop was conducted with mental health academic researchers to elicit the underlying values that should inform the design of socially assistive robots for social anxiety support. Through creative, reflective, and envisioning activities, participants explored scenarios and design possibilities, allowing for systematic elicitation of values, expectations, needs, and preferences related to robot-supported interventions. The findings reveal rich insights into design-relevant values-including adaptivity, acceptance, and efficacy-that are core to support for individuals with social anxiety. This study highlights the significance of a research-led approach to value elicitation, emphasising user-centred and context-aware design considerations in the development of socially assistive robots.
title Value Elicitation for a Socially Assistive Robot Addressing Social Anxiety: A Participatory Design Approach
topic Robotics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.03444