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Elderly Care Robots Study: Lovot and Kebbi to Interact with Seniors in Singapore Care Centres

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🤖 Pioneering Elderly Care Robots Study Launches in Singapore

Singapore is stepping into the future of eldercare with a novel research study deploying Lovot and Kebbi robots to foster social interactions among seniors in care centres. Launched on January 30 at PCF Sparkle Care @ Kreta Ayer, this six-month initiative jointly led by eldercare agency PCF Sparkle Care and the Singapore University of Social Sciences (SUSS) aims to determine if these companion robots can help reserved seniors open up during group activities. The study involves around 70 seniors across four locations, marking a significant step in addressing loneliness in an ageing society.

Minister for Digital Development and Information Josephine Teo officiated the launch, highlighting the need to create inclusive environments for seniors from the Pioneer and Merdeka Generations. This collaboration underscores SUSS's growing role in applied social sciences research, blending technology with gerontology to enhance quality of life.

Launch of Lovot and Kebbi robots study at PCF Sparkle Care Kreta Ayer with Minister Josephine Teo

Spotlight on Lovot and Kebbi: Advanced Social Robots for Companionship

The Lovot robot, developed by Japanese firm Groove X, is a knee-high, doll-like companion priced at approximately S$14,000. Equipped with wheels for autonomous movement, it recognizes faces, adjusts responses based on facial expressions and voice tones, and emits endearing baby-like noises instead of speech. Its expressive eyes and ability to flap arms make it particularly appealing for emotional bonding.

Complementing Lovot is the Kebbi robot from Taiwan's Nuwa Robotics, costing around S$2,000. While specific features are tailored for interactive play, Kebbi shares the cheerful personality designed to engage users through movement and responses. Together, these robots act as 'junior care programme coordinators,' facilitating games, conversations, and multi-generational interactions with children and youth.

In practical terms, seniors can pat or hug the robots, which respond affectionately, helping to break the ice in group settings where human interactions might feel intimidating.

Deployment Strategy Across Singapore Care Centres

The study kicks off at PCF Sparkle Care @ Kreta Ayer in Jalan Besar, with three pairs of Lovot and Kebbi (six robots total) progressively rolling out to Bukit Panjang, Braddell Heights, and Eunos centres. Data collection involves the robots' built-in cameras, alongside interviews and surveys with seniors and staff, to evaluate social engagement metrics over six months starting February.

This structured approach allows researchers to observe real-world dynamics step-by-step: initial introductions, adaptation phases, and long-term interaction patterns. For instance, robots will follow seniors during activities, encouraging participation without overwhelming them.

Past deployments, like a five-week trial at Sengkang Community Hospital (SKCH) in collaboration with SUSS, showed patients feeling less lonely and more energized through cuddling and video calls facilitated by Lovot.

Core Objectives: Combating Loneliness and Boosting Engagement

At its heart, the elderly care robots study seeks to empower quieter seniors—often those with dementia—to express themselves freely. By providing a non-judgmental listener, robots alleviate isolation, a pressing issue as Singapore approaches super-aged status with over 21% of its population aged 65+ by 2026.

  • Facilitate group conversations and games to build confidence.
  • Support multi-generational bonding with younger visitors.
  • Gather evidence for scalable, permanent robot integration in eldercare.

Expected outcomes include measurable increases in verbal participation and emotional expression, informing policy on tech-human care hybrids.

Explore opportunities in Singapore's higher education sector where such research thrives.

Promising Insights from Preliminary Trials

An informal 2025 trial at PCF Sparkle Care in Tampines revealed transformative effects: wary seniors began talking and singing to robots within a week, including dementia patients recalling dialect songs from their youth. PCF Sparkle Care COO Andy Seet noted, “Seniors who did not talk at all suddenly began talking or even singing to the robots.”

80-year-old Madam Choo Poh Choo, a dementia patient, shared, “This could help alleviate loneliness... robots always offer a patient listening ear without judgment.” These anecdotes highlight robots' role in evoking memories and emotions.

Similar successes at Lions Home for the Elders with Kebbi leading trivia and music sessions calmed agitated residents, demonstrating broad applicability.

Seniors happily interacting with Lovot and Kebbi robots during trial activities in Singapore care centre

Singapore's Silver Tsunami: The Imperative for Robotic Interventions

Singapore's population is ageing rapidly—by 2030, one in four will be 65 or older, up from one in ten in 2010, straining caregiver resources. The government's Action Plan for Successful Ageing 2023 emphasizes tech-enabled independence, with initiatives like Healthier SG targeting 550,000 seniors for preventive care.

Companion robots fit seamlessly, offering 24/7 emotional support amid rising single-elderly households. In care settings, they complement human staff by handling repetitive engagements, freeing caregivers for complex needs.

For academics and researchers, this landscape opens doors; check research jobs at institutions like SUSS driving these innovations.

Ministry of Health's Action Plan.

SUSS Leads the Way in Social Robotics Research

Singapore University of Social Sciences (SUSS) is at the forefront, with Dr. Kelvin Tan's team conducting a qualitative phenomenological study on Lovot for community-dwelling single older adults. Findings showed robots evoking maternal caring behaviors, enhancing well-being and combating isolation via AI-learned routines.

Published in JMIR Human Factors (2024), the study highlights higher human-like mimicry boosting acceptance. SUSS's Social Impact Hub funded expansions, including SKCH trials where patients reported joy and reduced loneliness.

This builds on global efforts but tailors to Singapore's multicultural context, incorporating Singlish recognition in related AI tools. Aspiring researchers can pursue roles via higher ed research assistant jobs.

SUSS Social Robot Research Page.

Stakeholder Perspectives: From Seniors to Experts

Seniors like Madam Tan Choon Sin have embraced the robots, with staff observing increased participation. Experts affirm: robots provide comfort without fatigue, ideal for dementia care where agitation is common.

  • Care staff: Note calmer environments and memory recall.
  • Researchers: Emphasize data-driven scaling.
  • Government: Supports tech for active ageing.

Challenges include initial wariness and costs, but benefits outweigh, as per Dr. Tan: tech reduces carer burnout.

Navigating Challenges and Ethical Frontiers

While promising, ethical concerns like privacy (robot cameras) and over-reliance must be addressed. Developers ensure low-resolution imaging and staff oversight. Costs pose scalability issues, though shared models in centres mitigate this.

Cultural adaptation—ensuring robots resonate with diverse dialects—is key. No staffing reductions planned; robots augment human empathy, as Mr. Seet stresses: “Human care remains irreplaceable.”

For higher ed professionals, ethical AI in gerotech offers rich PhD topics; see academic career advice.

Future Horizons: Scaling Robotics in Eldercare

Post-study, permanent deployments could expand, aligning with pilots like Lions Home's Kebbi trivia sessions or AWWA's exoskeletons. By 2030, integrated AI-robot ecosystems may dominate, preventing hospital admissions via predictive analytics.

Government backing via AIC and Synapxe accelerates this, positioning Singapore as a robotics hub. For global researchers, collaborations with SUSS beckon.

Professionals in this field might explore university jobs or faculty positions in social sciences and tech.

Vision of future elderly care with social robots in Singapore centres

Career Opportunities in Singapore's Gerotech Research Boom

This study exemplifies how universities like SUSS bridge academia and societal needs, creating demand for experts in robotics, psychology, and data analysis. With Singapore's super-aged trajectory, higher ed institutions seek postdocs and lecturers in ageing studies.

Actionable insights: Pursue interdisciplinary roles combining AI and social work. Visit postdoc opportunities, higher ed jobs, career advice, rate your professors, or university jobs to advance in this vital field.

CNA Feature on Singapore Eldercare Tech.
Portrait of Dr. Elena Ramirez
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Dr. Elena RamirezView author

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Frequently Asked Questions

🤖What is the elderly care robots study in Singapore about?

The study, by PCF Sparkle Care and SUSS, tests Lovot and Kebbi robots to help reserved seniors engage in groups at four care centres, running six months from February.

❤️How do Lovot and Kebbi robots work with seniors?

Lovot makes baby noises and recognizes faces; Kebbi supports activities. They act as icebreakers for games and chats, encouraging emotional expression. Research assistant jobs available.

🏥Which care centres are involved?

PCF Sparkle Care @ Kreta Ayer, Bukit Panjang, Braddell Heights, Eunos; 70 seniors total.

😊What were preliminary trial results?

2025 Tampines trial: Seniors sang and talked to robots after initial wariness; dementia patients recalled memories.

📈Why is this relevant to Singapore's ageing population?

By 2026, >21% aged 65+; robots address caregiver shortages and loneliness in super-aged society.

🎓What is SUSS's role in social robot research?

SUSS led home studies on Lovot, publishing positive well-being findings; expands to care centres. See Singapore uni opportunities.

⚠️Are there challenges with these robots?

Initial senior apprehension, privacy from cameras, high costs; mitigated by oversight and shared use.

🏛️How does government support eldercare robotics?

Action Plan for Successful Ageing and AIC pilots promote AI for independence.

🚀What future for robots in Singapore eldercare?

Scalable deployments, integrated AI for prediction; potential global model.

💼Career paths in this field at Singapore universities?

Demand for gerotech experts; explore higher ed jobs, career advice, postdocs in social robotics.

🧠How do robots help dementia patients specifically?

Calm agitation via music/trivia; evoke memories without judgment, as in Lions Home trials.