Abstract

In recent years, the rapid ageing of the population, a longer life expectancy and elderly people’s desire to live independently are social changes that put pressure on healthcare systems. This context is boosting the demand for companion and entertainment social robots on the market and, consequently, producers and distributors are interested in knowing how these social robots are accepted by consumers. Based on technology acceptance models, a parsimonious model is proposed to estimate the intention to use this new advanced social robot technology and, in addition, an analysis is performed to determine how consumers’ gender and rational thinking condition the precedents of the intention to use. The results show that gender differences are more important than suggested by the literature. While women gave greater social influence and perceived enjoyment as the main motives for using a social robot, in contrast, men considered their perceived usefulness to be the principal reason and, as a differential argument, the ease of use. Regarding the reasoning system, the most significant differences occurred between heuristic individuals, who stated social influence as the main reason for using a robot, and the more rational consumers, who gave ease of use as a differential argument.

Highlights

  • A robot has been defined as “an autonomous machine capable of sensing its environment, carrying out computations to make decisions, and performing actions in the real world” [1]

  • A relationship model based on UTAUT was estimated using SEM, which calculates the effect that different constructs have on the dependent variable and, in addition, the amount of variability explained by this relationship model (R2)

  • This study proposes that parsimonious adaptation of the UTAUT model can be used to evaluate the technological acceptance of different social robot appliances [17, 18]

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Summary

Introduction

A robot has been defined as “an autonomous machine capable of sensing its environment, carrying out computations to make decisions, and performing actions in the real world” [1]. Pillinger [6], completing Weber’s [4] proposal, considered that three types of relationships with social robots currently predominate: between caregiver and child/baby, between owner and his/her pet, and with sex robots. All these technological advances have coincided in time with significant demographic changes, derived from a rapid ageing of the population, a longer life expectancy and the elderly having an increasing desire to lead an independent life [7]. Entertainment and companion robots, designed for leisure purposes, would be close to the relationship classified by Weber as owner-pet

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