Agoraquest Logo
The only place for the Sony Enthusiast Free Member Registration | Login | Contact Us | Quick Search Forum   
Main Menu
  • Home
  • Topics
  • Forums
  • Reviews
  • The Top
  • Web Links
  • File Downloads
  • Photo Gallery
  • Archived Articles
  • Media Center
  • Useful Sections
  • Sony Issues
  • Sony Alerts
  • Senior Members
  • Premium Members
  • eBay Sony Auction
  • Search Site
  • About Us
  • Recommend Us
  • Members List
  • Bookmark this Page

    Additional Features
  • Linking to Us
  • Owner Manuals
  • Calender of Events
  • Contact Us
  • Stock Market
  • Agorasearch
  • Break It Down Blog

  • Sponsors




    Who's Online
    Currently Online
    Visitors:193
    Members:0
    Total of:193 users

    MemberLogged
    Most Online Users
    Visitors:794
    Members:1
    Total of:795 online users
    November 14, 2012, 2:44 pm

    Your Current Status
    You are Anonymous user. Register for free by clicking here.

     Inbox
    Log in to check your private message


      
    Moderated By: jttar
    Agoraquest Forum Index » » Off-topic
      
    Feeling Lonely? Sony Can Help Dashboard
    Replies: 5 | Views: 1,636
    Last Reply: March 2, 2008, 5:33 pm

    View Printable Version of this thread
    Members below have participated in this thread
    Maxxwire | jttar | Toli | RickeyM |
    Search other threads for related issues/solutions: or use Advance Forum Search
    Get the latest Exclusive Sony News by Joining our RSS Feed or Get RSS Via Email
    Author Feeling Lonely? Sony Can Help
    jttar
    Moderator
    Premium Member

    Rank: Sony Master


    Joined: Feb 28, 2003
    Posts: 9156
    From: Chicago,IL, USA

      Posted: 2008-02-28 22:47


    Heard this on the news this morning.

    Joe
    Faux Fido eases loneliness in nursing home residents as well as real dog, SLU study findsResidents connect as well with tail-wagging robot as authentic animal
    ST. LOUIS -- A sophisticated robotic dog could be a good companion for your dog-loving grandmother who can’t care for a living pet, a new Saint Louis University study suggests.
    The researchers compared how residents of three nursing homes interacted with Sparky, a living, medium-sized gentle mutt, and Aibo, a doggie robot once manufactured by Sony that looks like a three-dimensional cartoon.
    “The most surprising thing is they worked almost equally well in terms of alleviating loneliness and causing residents to form attachments,” says William A. Banks, M.D., professor of geriatric medicine at Saint Louis University.
    “For those people who can’t have a living pet but who would like to have a pet, robotics could address the issue of companionship,” Banks says.
    To test whether residents connected better with Sparky or Aibo, researchers divided a total of 38 nursing home residents into three groups. All were asked questions to assess their level of loneliness. One group saw Sparky once a week for 30 minutes, another group had similar visits with Aibo, and a control group saw neither furry nor mechanical critter.
    During visits, Marian Banks, Banks’ wife and co-researcher, brought Sparky or Aibo into a resident’s room and placed the pet companion near the resident. Both pets interacted with residents -- wagging their tails and responding to the people they visited.
    After seven weeks, all residents were asked questions about how lonely they felt and how attached they were to Sparky or Aibo.
    The residents who received visits from real and artificial pooches felt less lonely and more attached to their canine attention-givers than those who got visits from neither.
    There was no statistical difference between whether the real or robotic dog did a better job easing loneliness and fostering attachments.
    Whether powered by a beating heart or by a rechargeable battery, dogs can be powerful weapons in helping pet-loving nursing home residents feel less lonely and more connected to another being, Banks says.
    “There is a lot of loneliness in nursing homes and animal-assisted therapy – whether from a dog or a robot – is one answer for addressing that,” he says.
    Robots with personality also could help care for older adults who live alone and need a little monitoring, Banks adds. Think R2D2.
    “This health companion could follow a person in his home, giving reminders on when to take medication or sending out an alert when a person has suddenly gone from a vertical position to a horizontal one,” Banks says.
    “A person could get tired of a robot following him around. But if you could change that inanimate voyeur to a personal part of his life and a companion, that could be entirely different.”
    ###


    The research was published in the March issue of the Journal of the American Medical Directors Association.


         


    RickeyM
    Premium Member

    Rank: Sony King


    Joined: Sep 09, 2004
    Posts: 1408
    From: Baltimore, Maryland

      Posted: 2008-02-29 00:26

    I've visited people in nursing homes. Many people hardly get any human visitors at all. I wish I could arrange for pet visits for all of 'em.
     
    I saw something on the tube once about a nursing home that cats living there that were free to roam about to visit residents. Many residents liked it and responded well. One thing happened that they couldn't explain. Many times when a resident (unknown to the staff) was about to pass away, the cats would spend more time with that person.

    HEY! I think I've found the story.

    http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/02/27/health/webmd/main3884731.shtml


         
    Toli
    Moderator
    Premium Member

    Rank: Sony Master


    Joined: Oct 20, 2003
    Posts: 8509
    From: Winthrop Harbor, IL USA

      Posted: 2008-02-29 07:17

    I started a thread in the AIBO forum and linked it to this one.

    Toli


         
    jttar
    Moderator
    Premium Member

    Rank: Sony Master


    Joined: Feb 28, 2003
    Posts: 9156
    From: Chicago,IL, USA

      Posted: 2008-03-01 17:18

    • Member Quote

    On 2008-02-29 07:17, Toli wrote:
    I started a thread in the AIBO forum and linked it to this one.

    Toli

    ***************************************************************

    Thanks Toli,

    First post activity over at the AIBO forum in many months. I thought about posting there but wasn't sure if any members even look over there anymore.

    Joe


         
    Maxxwire
    Moderator
    Premium Member

    Rank: Sony Adept


    Joined: Aug 29, 2002
    Posts: 25732
    From: Portland, Oregon - USA

      Posted: 2008-03-02 01:36

    Joe- There might be some lonely people out there who would prefer the company of a robot pussy cat to cuddle up with to alleiviate their loneliness.

    ~Maxx~


         
    jttar
    Moderator
    Premium Member

    Rank: Sony Master


    Joined: Feb 28, 2003
    Posts: 9156
    From: Chicago,IL, USA

      Posted: 2008-03-02 17:33

    Your absolutely right there Maxx.
    Variety is the spice of life and to each his own.

    Joe


         
    Advance Features
      
    Jump To:
    Locations 
of visitors to this page


    All logos and information in this site are property of their respective owner. The comments are property of their posters. This website www.agoraquest.com, Claudio Meira and Agoraquest, LLC is not tided in any form to the Sony Corporation (www.sony.com). This unoffical website is just place where Sony products are reviewed among the general public. Sony is a registered of Sony, Inc. "PlayStation", "PlayStation2", the PlayStation "PS" logo, and all associated logos/graphics. "Agoraquest, LLC" and "agoraquest.com" are associated exclusively with agoraquest.com, and are NOT associated in ANY way with Sony Electronics, Inc. To view the privacy policy, please click here and to view the terms of use, please click here. If you have any further questions, please contact using our online form.