Publication | Closed Access
Living and working with service robots: a TCCM analysis and considerations for future research
109
Citations
97
References
2022
Year
Artificial IntelligenceCustomer SatisfactionTccm AnalysisEngineeringSocially Assistive RobotField RoboticsRobotic AgentEducationIntelligent SystemsCommunicationTccm ViewSystems EngineeringRobot LearningAssistive TechnologyService StudyDesignUser ExperienceService RobotFuture ResearchService RoboticsMarketingHuman-robot InteractionTccm PerspectiveAutomationPurpose Service RobotsPersonal RobotService InteractionTechnologyRoboticsService Robots
Service robots have become integral to everyday life, making them a hot research topic. The study reviews recent service robot literature using a TCCM framework and identifies future research opportunities. The authors analyzed 88 papers and incorporated qualitative input from 79 researchers. The literature focuses on robot–human comparison, appearance, consumer attitudes, and conversational skills, with anthropomorphism theory prevailing and studies mainly experimental or scenario-based.
Purpose Service robots are now an integral part of people's living and working environment, making service robots one of the hot topics for service researchers today. Against that background, the paper reviews the recent service robot literature following a Theory-Context-Characteristics-Methodology (TCCM) approach to capture the state of art of the field. In addition, building on qualitative input from researchers who are active in this field, the authors highlight where opportunities for further development and growth lie. Design/methodology/approach The paper identifies and analyzes 88 manuscripts (featuring 173 individual studies) published in academic journals featured on the SERVSIG literature alert. In addition, qualitative input gathered from 79 researchers who are active in the service field and doing research on service robots is infused throughout the manuscript. Findings The key research foci of the service robot literature to date include comparing service robots with humans, the role of service robots' look and feel, consumer attitudes toward service robots and the role of service robot conversational skills and behaviors. From a TCCM view, the authors discern dominant theories (anthropomorphism theory), contexts (retail/healthcare, USA samples, Business-to-Consumer (B2C) settings and customer focused), study characteristics (robot types: chatbots, not embodied and text/voice-based; outcome focus: customer intentions) and methodologies (experimental, picture-based scenarios). Originality/value The current paper is the first to analyze the service robot literature from a TCCM perspective. Doing so, the study gives (1) a comprehensive picture of the field to date and (2) highlights key pathways to inspire future work.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1