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Survey of potential receptivity to robotic-assisted exercise coaching in a diverse sample of smokers and nonsmokers

Author

Listed:
  • Christi Patten
  • James Levine
  • Ioannis Pavlidis
  • Joyce Balls-Berry
  • Arya Shah
  • Christine Hughes
  • Tabetha Brockman
  • Miguel Valdez Soto
  • Daniel Witt
  • Gabriel Koepp
  • Pamela Sinicrope
  • Jamie Richards

Abstract

A prior project found that an intensive (12 weeks, thrice weekly sessions) in-person, supervised, exercise coaching intervention was effective for smoking cessation among depressed women smokers. However, the sample was 90% White and of high socioeconomic status, and the intensity of the intervention limits its reach. One approach to intervention scalability is to deliver the supervised exercise coaching using a robotic human exercise trainer. This is done in real time via an iPad tablet placed on a mobile robotic wheel base and controlled remotely by an iOS device or computer. As an initial step, this preliminary study surveyed potential receptivity to a robotic-assisted exercise coaching intervention among 100 adults recruited in two community settings, and explored the association of technology acceptance scores with smoking status and other demographics. Participants watched a brief demonstration of the robot-delivered exercise coaching and completed a 19-item survey assessing socio-demographics and technology receptivity measured by the 8-item Technology Acceptance Scale (TAS). Open-ended written feedback was obtained, and content analysis was used to derive themes from these data. Respondents were: 40% female, 56% unemployed, 41% racial minority, 38% current smoker, and 58% depression history. Mean total TAS score was 34.0 (SD = 5.5) of possible 40, indicating overall very good receptivity to the robotic-assisted exercise intervention concept. Racial minorities and unemployed participants reported greater technology acceptance than White (p = 0.015) and employed (p

Suggested Citation

  • Christi Patten & James Levine & Ioannis Pavlidis & Joyce Balls-Berry & Arya Shah & Christine Hughes & Tabetha Brockman & Miguel Valdez Soto & Daniel Witt & Gabriel Koepp & Pamela Sinicrope & Jamie Ric, 2018. "Survey of potential receptivity to robotic-assisted exercise coaching in a diverse sample of smokers and nonsmokers," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 13(5), pages 1-12, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0197090
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0197090
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