In Search of Informal Caregivers in HRI : A Critical Narrative Review of HRI Conference Papers
(2025) In International Journal of Social Robotics- Abstract
- Background: As the field of Human-Robot Interaction aims to develop and deploy robot applications for/in health care, it is important to disentangle research practices to understand who is (i) investigated, (ii) involved and (iii) how.
Objectives: The principal aim is to identify and synthesise how articles in HRI for/in health care generally include various stakeholders in their studies. The secondary aim, evolving directly from the initial aim, is to shed a light on informal caregivers in contrast to healthcare professionals.
Method: Using a critical narrative review method, we reviewed 52 articles related to health care published in the ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (2006-2023). We... (More) - Background: As the field of Human-Robot Interaction aims to develop and deploy robot applications for/in health care, it is important to disentangle research practices to understand who is (i) investigated, (ii) involved and (iii) how.
Objectives: The principal aim is to identify and synthesise how articles in HRI for/in health care generally include various stakeholders in their studies. The secondary aim, evolving directly from the initial aim, is to shed a light on informal caregivers in contrast to healthcare professionals.
Method: Using a critical narrative review method, we reviewed 52 articles related to health care published in the ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (2006-2023). We specifically report on (1) how the studies are motivated, (2) who the studies include, (3) the methods used, and (4) how informal caregivers and healthcare professionals are accounted for.
Results: Overall, there is seemingly an exponential growth in HRI in health care studies. From the 52 articles reviewed, 36 investigated care receivers, 20 investigated healthcare professionals and eight investigated informal caregivers. Using an alarming narrative to situate the study in opening paragraphs is commonly used, especially for care receivers and healthcare professionals. Care receivers were often investigated as a sole group, unlike other stakeholders. Healthcare professionals were often part of interview or focus group studies, whilst informal caregivers were often involved in workshops or laboratory studies. Finally, in 38 studies informal caregivers were either not mentioned or solely acknowledged, in contrast to 18 studies either not mentioning or acknowledging healthcare professionals.
Conclusion: This critical narrative review demonstrates the importance that the HRI community gives to care receivers' feedback as well as the inclusion of healthcare professionals' expertise to deploy robots in health care. This review has also identified an important gap regarding the lack of inclusion of informal caregivers in studies, despite their vital role. We therefore offer five recommendations on how to include informal caregivers more in study designs. (Less)
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https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/d762cb1e-e5b2-415f-a83d-a7c1c3c64bca
- author
- Tanqueray, Laetitia LU ; Larsson, Stefan LU and Winkle, Katie
- organization
- publishing date
- 2025-11-27
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- in press
- subject
- keywords
- HRI, Health Care, Informal Caregivers, Critical Literature Review, Narrative Review, Social Justice, Care receivers, healthcare professionals, Feminist HRI
- in
- International Journal of Social Robotics
- publisher
- Springer
- ISSN
- 1875-4791
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- d762cb1e-e5b2-415f-a83d-a7c1c3c64bca
- date added to LUP
- 2024-08-19 06:19:19
- date last changed
- 2025-12-19 14:59:30
@article{d762cb1e-e5b2-415f-a83d-a7c1c3c64bca,
abstract = {{Background: As the field of Human-Robot Interaction aims to develop and deploy robot applications for/in health care, it is important to disentangle research practices to understand who is (i) investigated, (ii) involved and (iii) how. <br/><br/>Objectives: The principal aim is to identify and synthesise how articles in HRI for/in health care generally include various stakeholders in their studies. The secondary aim, evolving directly from the initial aim, is to shed a light on informal caregivers in contrast to healthcare professionals.<br/><br/>Method: Using a critical narrative review method, we reviewed 52 articles related to health care published in the ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (2006-2023). We specifically report on (1) how the studies are motivated, (2) who the studies include, (3) the methods used, and (4) how informal caregivers and healthcare professionals are accounted for. <br/><br/>Results: Overall, there is seemingly an exponential growth in HRI in health care studies. From the 52 articles reviewed, 36 investigated care receivers, 20 investigated healthcare professionals and eight investigated informal caregivers. Using an alarming narrative to situate the study in opening paragraphs is commonly used, especially for care receivers and healthcare professionals. Care receivers were often investigated as a sole group, unlike other stakeholders. Healthcare professionals were often part of interview or focus group studies, whilst informal caregivers were often involved in workshops or laboratory studies. Finally, in 38 studies informal caregivers were either not mentioned or solely acknowledged, in contrast to 18 studies either not mentioning or acknowledging healthcare professionals.<br/><br/>Conclusion: This critical narrative review demonstrates the importance that the HRI community gives to care receivers' feedback as well as the inclusion of healthcare professionals' expertise to deploy robots in health care. This review has also identified an important gap regarding the lack of inclusion of informal caregivers in studies, despite their vital role. We therefore offer five recommendations on how to include informal caregivers more in study designs.}},
author = {{Tanqueray, Laetitia and Larsson, Stefan and Winkle, Katie}},
issn = {{1875-4791}},
keywords = {{HRI; Health Care; Informal Caregivers; Critical Literature Review; Narrative Review; Social Justice; Care receivers; healthcare professionals; Feminist HRI}},
language = {{eng}},
month = {{11}},
publisher = {{Springer}},
series = {{International Journal of Social Robotics}},
title = {{In Search of Informal Caregivers in HRI : A Critical Narrative Review of HRI Conference Papers}},
url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/236123788/Tanqueray_et_al._Preprint_._In_Search_of_Informal_Caregivers_in_HRI.pdf}},
year = {{2025}},
}