Enhancing the well-being of seniors: a teachable agent for ikigai

Ikigai, a Japanese term often referred to as “purpose in life” or “the feeling that life is worthwhile”, is a commonly used indicator of well-being in studies focused on the elderly population in Japan. It can be identified within the different realms like family, work, and friendship. However, as i...

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Main Authors: Chen, Ping, Yu, Xinjia, Lim, Su Fang, Shen, Zhiqi
Other Authors: School of Computer Science and Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/178870
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1788702024-07-12T15:36:13Z Enhancing the well-being of seniors: a teachable agent for ikigai Chen, Ping Yu, Xinjia Lim, Su Fang Shen, Zhiqi School of Computer Science and Engineering Computer and Information Science Ikigai Teachable agents Ikigai, a Japanese term often referred to as “purpose in life” or “the feeling that life is worthwhile”, is a commonly used indicator of well-being in studies focused on the elderly population in Japan. It can be identified within the different realms like family, work, and friendship. However, as individuals age, their sense of ikigai is prone to diminish. Teachable agents (TAs) have been employed in educational settings for decades to facilitate learning by teaching students. Previous research has indicated that TAs can have a positive impact on self-esteem which is an important aspect of ikigai. TAs may hold the potential to address issues related to declining ikigai that are often associated with aging. By engaging in the act of teaching the agent, elderly individuals may experience a sense of being needed, consequently enhancing their self-esteem and potentially leading to an improvement in their ikigai levels. In this paper, we introduce a TA designed around the concept of ikigai, aiming at assisting the elderly in maintaining a high level of ikigai to support healthy aging. Based on a user study conducted using the phenomenographical approach, we demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed TA design. Published version 2024-07-10T00:32:59Z 2024-07-10T00:32:59Z 2024 Journal Article Chen, P., Yu, X., Lim, S. F. & Shen, Z. (2024). Enhancing the well-being of seniors: a teachable agent for ikigai. International Journal of Crowd Science, 8(2), 71-76. https://dx.doi.org/10.26599/IJCS.2024.9100006 2398-7294 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/178870 10.26599/IJCS.2024.9100006 2-s2.0-85194869835 2 8 71 76 en International Journal of Crowd Science © The author(s) 2024. The articles published in this open access journal are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Computer and Information Science
Ikigai
Teachable agents
spellingShingle Computer and Information Science
Ikigai
Teachable agents
Chen, Ping
Yu, Xinjia
Lim, Su Fang
Shen, Zhiqi
Enhancing the well-being of seniors: a teachable agent for ikigai
description Ikigai, a Japanese term often referred to as “purpose in life” or “the feeling that life is worthwhile”, is a commonly used indicator of well-being in studies focused on the elderly population in Japan. It can be identified within the different realms like family, work, and friendship. However, as individuals age, their sense of ikigai is prone to diminish. Teachable agents (TAs) have been employed in educational settings for decades to facilitate learning by teaching students. Previous research has indicated that TAs can have a positive impact on self-esteem which is an important aspect of ikigai. TAs may hold the potential to address issues related to declining ikigai that are often associated with aging. By engaging in the act of teaching the agent, elderly individuals may experience a sense of being needed, consequently enhancing their self-esteem and potentially leading to an improvement in their ikigai levels. In this paper, we introduce a TA designed around the concept of ikigai, aiming at assisting the elderly in maintaining a high level of ikigai to support healthy aging. Based on a user study conducted using the phenomenographical approach, we demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed TA design.
author2 School of Computer Science and Engineering
author_facet School of Computer Science and Engineering
Chen, Ping
Yu, Xinjia
Lim, Su Fang
Shen, Zhiqi
format Article
author Chen, Ping
Yu, Xinjia
Lim, Su Fang
Shen, Zhiqi
author_sort Chen, Ping
title Enhancing the well-being of seniors: a teachable agent for ikigai
title_short Enhancing the well-being of seniors: a teachable agent for ikigai
title_full Enhancing the well-being of seniors: a teachable agent for ikigai
title_fullStr Enhancing the well-being of seniors: a teachable agent for ikigai
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing the well-being of seniors: a teachable agent for ikigai
title_sort enhancing the well-being of seniors: a teachable agent for ikigai
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/178870
_version_ 1814047074466922496