HIGHLIGHTS
SUMMARY
The authors interviewed users from two groups of patients: one group received instructions and feedback during the 15 rehabilitation-exercise sessions from a humanoid robot, and the other used the exact same exercise platform, but received instructions and feedback from a computer. It was argued that both the robot`s technical ability and its social behavior contribute to the trust relationship formed between patients and the SAR in rehabilitation. Contrary to the trust that most SAR-group patients expressed regarding the system`s functionality (78% supportive), they expressed less appreciation of its social skills . . .
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