ENTERPRISE AI ANALYSIS
Robots for Older Adults: A Scoping Review
Authors: SAMUEL A. OLATUNJI, YAO-LIN TSAI, SAATHVEEK A. GOWRISHANKAR, MEGAN A. BAYLES, WENDY A. ROGERS
Publication: ACM Transactions on Human-Robot Interaction - 03 March 2026
Executive Impact Summary
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Deep Analysis & Enterprise Applications
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Tasks Explored for Robots Supporting Older Adults (RQ3)
Description: More than half (52%) of robots focused on Enhanced Activities of Daily Living (EADLs), including companionship, entertainment, and video communication. Common Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADLs) supported were medication reminders, retrieving/delivering items, housekeeping, and shopping assistance. Few robots supported basic Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) directly, with most ADL-focused robots still in development.
Key Takeaway: EADLs dominate current robot support, with significant opportunities for growth in ADLs and IADLs to address higher-need areas for older adults.
PRISMA Flow Diagram
The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines were followed to ensure comprehensive and transparent reporting. The process involved defining a review protocol, documenting a search strategy, specifying inclusion/exclusion criteria, and developing a coding scheme.
Remote HRI Studies During COVID-19
Description: The COVID-19 pandemic necessitated remote Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) studies, opening new dimensions for research. These included robot delivery, Wizard-of-Oz experiments through telepresence, video-enhanced web-surveys, and 'Stay at Home' experiments where simple robots were delivered or participants used their own (e.g., Roomba). This period highlighted adaptability and innovation in research methodology.
Key Takeaway: Remote HRI methods advanced significantly during the pandemic, revealing new avenues for research despite in-person interaction limitations.
| Health Conditions | Description/Examples | References |
|---|---|---|
| Hearing Impairment | Difficulty or inability to hear sounds |
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| Visual Impairment | Eyesight that cannot be corrected to a normal level, from mild vision impairment to total blindness |
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| Mobility Impairment | Difficulty in ambulation resulting from functional limitation in the lower extremities |
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| Cognitive Impairment | Problems with a person's ability to think, learn, remember, use judgement, and make decisions |
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| Robot Category | Definition | Functions | Robot Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Social | Robots that interact with humans and each other in a socially acceptable fashion, conveying intention in a human-perceptible way and following social norms, behaviors, and values. | Companionship, emotional support, pet therapy, conversational agents |
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| Assistive | Robots that give aid or support to a human user. These devices can provide physical assistance based on an individual's clinical needs. | Provide physical support for daily activities. |
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| Telepresence | Robots with video conferencing capabilities that can facilitate human interaction from a distance. | Telemedicine, remote interactions with healthcare professionals, family members, and friends, telehealth monitoring tasks, virtual tours and social gatherings. |
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Enterprise AI Implementation Timeline
A strategic roadmap to guide your organization through the successful integration of AI and HRI technologies, leveraging insights from current research.
Phase 1: Needs Assessment & Strategic Alignment
Define specific challenges older adults face that robots can address. Align robot functionalities with ADL, IADL, and EADL classifications to ensure targeted support. Involve older adults and care providers in early-stage design.
Phase 2: Pilot Program & Iterative Development
Deploy prototypes in controlled environments (labs, facilities) for feasibility and usability testing. Prioritize robots addressing mobility/cognitive impairments and ADLs. Collect diverse user feedback for iterative design improvements.
Phase 3: Real-World Deployment & Evaluation
Transition successful pilots to home and naturalistic settings. Implement stringent safety protocols. Collaborate with healthcare professionals to ensure ethical and effective deployment. Standardize reporting of participant demographics and robot capabilities.
Phase 4: Scalability & Continuous Improvement
Develop scalable solutions based on robust evidence. Foster interdisciplinary collaboration for ongoing research and development. Refine robot designs to promote successful aging and address a broader range of needs, moving beyond stereotypes.