Doing Virtual Companionship with Alexa

Technologists often claim that virtual assistants, e.g., smart speakers, can offer 'smart companionship for independent older people'. However, the concept of companionship manifested by such technologies is rarely explained further. Studies of virtual assistants as assistive technologies...

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Main Authors: Lauren Hall, Saul Albert, Elizabeth Peel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Copenhagen 2024-11-01
Series:Social Interaction
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidsskrift.dk/socialinteraction/article/view/150089
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author Lauren Hall
Saul Albert
Elizabeth Peel
author_facet Lauren Hall
Saul Albert
Elizabeth Peel
author_sort Lauren Hall
collection DOAJ
description Technologists often claim that virtual assistants, e.g., smart speakers, can offer 'smart companionship for independent older people'. However, the concept of companionship manifested by such technologies is rarely explained further. Studies of virtual assistants as assistive technologies have tended to conceptualise companionship as a 'special form of friendship' or as a way of strengthening 'psychological wellbeing' and 'emotional resilience'. While these abstractions can be measured using psychological indices or self-report, they are not necessarily informative about how 'virtual companionship' may be performed in everyday interaction. This case study focuses on how a virtual assistant is used by a person living with dementia and asks to what extent it takes on a role recognizable, from interactional studies, as 'doing companionship'. We draw on naturalistic video data featuring a person living with dementia in her own home using a smart speaker. Our results show how actions such as complaints about and blamings directed towards the device are achieved through shifts of ‘footing’ between turns that are ostensibly ‘talk to oneself’ and turns designed to occasion a response. Our findings have implications for the design, feasibility, and ethics of virtual assistants as companions, and for our understanding of the embedded ontological assumptions, interactive participation frameworks, and conversational roles involved in doing companionship with machines.
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spelling doaj-art-b6e667f70a8c4eb6a943cdda6d3a16db2024-11-12T01:12:17ZengUniversity of CopenhagenSocial Interaction2446-36202024-11-017310.7146/si.v7i3.150089Doing Virtual Companionship with AlexaLauren Hall0Saul Albert1Elizabeth Peel2Loughborough UniversityLoughborough UniversityLoughborough UniversityTechnologists often claim that virtual assistants, e.g., smart speakers, can offer 'smart companionship for independent older people'. However, the concept of companionship manifested by such technologies is rarely explained further. Studies of virtual assistants as assistive technologies have tended to conceptualise companionship as a 'special form of friendship' or as a way of strengthening 'psychological wellbeing' and 'emotional resilience'. While these abstractions can be measured using psychological indices or self-report, they are not necessarily informative about how 'virtual companionship' may be performed in everyday interaction. This case study focuses on how a virtual assistant is used by a person living with dementia and asks to what extent it takes on a role recognizable, from interactional studies, as 'doing companionship'. We draw on naturalistic video data featuring a person living with dementia in her own home using a smart speaker. Our results show how actions such as complaints about and blamings directed towards the device are achieved through shifts of ‘footing’ between turns that are ostensibly ‘talk to oneself’ and turns designed to occasion a response. Our findings have implications for the design, feasibility, and ethics of virtual assistants as companions, and for our understanding of the embedded ontological assumptions, interactive participation frameworks, and conversational roles involved in doing companionship with machines. https://tidsskrift.dk/socialinteraction/article/view/150089companionsconversation analysisdiscoursive psychologydementiavirtual assistants
spellingShingle Lauren Hall
Saul Albert
Elizabeth Peel
Doing Virtual Companionship with Alexa
Social Interaction
companions
conversation analysis
discoursive psychology
dementia
virtual assistants
title Doing Virtual Companionship with Alexa
title_full Doing Virtual Companionship with Alexa
title_fullStr Doing Virtual Companionship with Alexa
title_full_unstemmed Doing Virtual Companionship with Alexa
title_short Doing Virtual Companionship with Alexa
title_sort doing virtual companionship with alexa
topic companions
conversation analysis
discoursive psychology
dementia
virtual assistants
url https://tidsskrift.dk/socialinteraction/article/view/150089
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