Learning to Talk to Alexa

Q4 Social Sciences Word of Mouth Pub Date : 2023-02-07 DOI:10.1177/10483950221150052
C. Westby
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The tech world is constantly changing. In addition to computers, iPads, and cell phones, children now have access to voice assistants (VAs). We know little about what children seek in their interactions with VAs and what they expect. We also know little about how children guide their interactions with VAs and how they adjust their inquiry behavior based on the responses received. Although children are growing up increasingly surrounded by VAs, we know little about the impact these interactive technologies have on children’s cognitive and social development. In this study, the authors address these gaps by thoroughly examining 3to 10-year-old children’s interactions with VAs and the characteristics of their inquiry behavior. Children learn by asking questions. Their ability to ask effective questions develops from age 4 to adulthood (e.g., Jones et al., 2020; Ruggeri et al., 2016; Ruggeri & Feufel, 2015; Ruggeri & Lombrozo, 2015). Preschool-age children are able to tailor their questions to maximize the information they receive (Ruggeri et al., 2017). They are also able to critically evaluate the answers they receive and act on how informative they think the answer is. If children are satisfied with the information they have received, they tend to end their search for information or ask a follow-up question to receive additional information. If they are not satisfied with the information, they repeat their original question (Chouinard et al., 2007; Frazier et al., 2009). Although preschoolers are developing the ability to judge whether their question has been answered, it is not until the elementary school years that children become sensitive to the level of informativeness of a response (Ronfard et al., 2018). Children can engage in conversations with VAs and ask them questions. Lovato and Piper (2015) reported that children engage with VAs mostly to seek information (e.g., “Do whales sleep?”); to understand the assistant as an agent (e.g., “What is your favorite food?”); to have fun with it, either by requesting jokes or by asking silly questions; and, to a lesser extent, to give commands by sending text messages. Most of A newsletter dedicated to speech & language in school-age children
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学习与Alexa交谈
科技世界在不断变化。除了电脑、iPad和手机,儿童现在还可以使用语音助手。我们对儿童在与VA的互动中寻求什么以及他们的期望知之甚少。我们对儿童如何引导他们与VA的互动,以及他们如何根据收到的回复调整他们的询问行为也知之甚少。尽管儿童在VAs的陪伴下成长,但我们对这些互动技术对儿童认知和社会发展的影响知之甚少。在这项研究中,作者通过彻底检查3至10岁儿童与VA的互动及其探究行为的特征来解决这些差距。孩子们通过提问来学习。他们提出有效问题的能力从4岁发展到成年(例如,Jones等人,2020;Ruggeri等人,2016;Ruggeri&Feufel,2015;Ruggeri-Lombrozo,2015)。学龄前儿童能够定制他们的问题,以最大限度地利用他们收到的信息(Ruggeri等人,2017)。他们还能够批判性地评估他们收到的答案,并根据他们认为答案的信息量采取行动。如果孩子们对他们收到的信息感到满意,他们往往会结束对信息的搜索,或提出后续问题以获得更多信息。如果他们对信息不满意,他们会重复他们最初的问题(Chouinard等人,2007年;Frazier等人,2009年)。尽管学龄前儿童正在培养判断他们的问题是否得到了回答的能力,但直到小学阶段,孩子们才对回答的信息性水平变得敏感(Ronfard等人,2018)。儿童可以与VA进行对话并向他们提问。Lovato和Piper(2015)报告称,儿童参与VA主要是为了寻求信息(例如,“鲸鱼睡觉吗?”);将助理理解为代理人(例如,“你最喜欢的食物是什么?”);通过请求笑话或提出愚蠢的问题来获得乐趣;在较小程度上,通过发送短信来发出命令。一份致力于学龄儿童言语和语言的时事通讯
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来源期刊
Word of Mouth
Word of Mouth Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
期刊介绍: ...helps frontline clinicians keep up with the latest trends in working with school-age children. Each 16-page issue of bare-bones, down-to-earth information includes reviews, resources, idea swap, and short bits.
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