Meet Grace, the humanoid robot offering companionship in a Montreal nursing home | CBC News

Lovely, intelligent and well-dressed.

That’s how 82-year-old Francis Greenberg describes Grace, the newest member at her long-term care home in Montreal’s Notre-Dame-De-Grâce neighbourhood.

Grace is a rosy-cheeked, young-looking woman with a layered bob haircut. Oh, and she’s also a robot. 

Designed by the GeriPARTy Laboratory team, Grace will be visiting Résidence Pearl & Theo twice a week for the next eight weeks as part of a study led by Montreal’s Jewish General Hospital.

Her goal during each 30-minute session will be to keep seniors living in nursing homes company and help break social isolation.

“It’s lovely to have something like this here,” said Greenberg, who is among three seniors taking part in the study. 

“Unfortunately I don’t have any grandchildren, so it’s a first experience.”

Francis Greenberg is one of three residents at Montreal’s Résidence Pearl & Theo taking part in the study. (Charles Contant/CBC News)

Grace is designed to listen when people speak, then generate a response. She can also tell jokes, do reading exercises and speak about topics that seniors might be interested in. 

To make interactions with the robot more realistic, the GeriPARTy team programmed movement into not only the eyes, but also the neck and hands. 

Theodora Montoure, co-owner of Résidence Pearl & Theo, says she’s excited to have Grace in her halls. The humanoid robot will be able to prioritize residents’ social needs and fill in where staff cannot, she says. 

WATCH | Here’s how Grace tries to make seniors feel less lonely:

This humanoid robot is tasked with breaking senior isolation

A seniors residence in Montreal is taking part in a pilot project to see if humanoid robots can help seniors with loneliness.

“We, as caregivers, are busy. Our residents are not busy all day long,” she said. 

“The entire industry is so understaffed … we do not have time to chit-chat and play with the residents throughout the day, but the robot can.”

Montoure says Grace will also be accessible to all residents. “They are all on different levels — mentally or they are aging differently — and they’ll find that the robot will be able to interact with them on their level,” she said. 

Theodora Montoure, co-owner of the nursing home, says Grace is a wonderful addition to her team. She says the robot will be able to offer residents company and a compassionate ear when staff are too busy to do so. (Charles Contant/CBC News)

Dr. Paola Lavin, a research associate at the Lady Davis Institute at the Jewish General Hospital, who is leading the project, says it is intended to help decrease loneliness and improve the mental health of isolated older adults — issues that have been highlighted throughout the course of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“We are hoping that the interactions with Grace could given [seniors] a space to vent, to be actively listened to, have social interactions and to enjoy a nice time,” she said. 

Amid staffing shortages in health care, including in nursing homes, Lavin says the robot can fill an important gap and serve as an assistant to humans — not as a replacement. 

Despite the fact that she’ll be able to see and interpret seniors, Grace will not be able to develop her own emotions. 

“She could be working [throughout] the day without fatigue, without all the mental burden of dealing with very strong emotions as we humans usually do,” she said. 

Dr. Paola Lavin, who is leading the project, says the results of the study will make it possible to improve the robot’s interactions with seniors and help achieve the goal of integrating them in nursing homes across Canada. (Charles Contant/CBC News)

Lavin says the team will be looking for initial feedback from seniors about their experiences interacting with Grace in order to keep teaching her how to better serve older adults. The ultimate goal is to integrate humanoid robots in retirement and long‐term care homes throughout Canada.

For Montoure, the project — developed during the pandemic — shows her one thing: “Finally, someone thought of the seniors.” 

After years of seniors being “ignored completely,” Montoure says she’s excited to see what impact this new friend will have on their spirits.

“Did something good come out of COVID? Yes. Grace came out of COVID,” she said. 

For all the latest Technology News Click Here 

 For the latest news and updates, follow us on Google News

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! TheDailyCheck is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected] The content will be deleted within 24 hours.