Talk at FHNW by Dr. Amol Deshmukh

Dr. Amol Deshmukh gave a talk on April 16, 2025 in the elective course „Soziale Roboter“ („Social Robots“) of Prof. Dr. Oliver Bendel. He previously worked at the University of Glasgow and is now a researcher at ETH Zurich. In his talk at FHNW, he presented the results of his paper „Leveraging Social Robots to Promote Hand Hygiene: A Cross-Cultural and Socio-Economic Study of Children in Diverse School Settings“. This study examined how socio-economic and cultural factors affect handwashing behavior in schools using a social robot. Pupils from different backgrounds in India and the UK were guided by a robot to learn proper handwashing. While lower-income students, especially in India, showed strong initial improvement, they needed ongoing support to retain it. Higher-income students retained knowledge better. The paper highlights the need to adapt tech-based interventions to cultural contexts and ensure long-term reinforcement. The talk was very well received by the 20 students, who asked several questions and gave a roaring round of applause.

Fig.: Amol Deshmukh during his talk

Elective Module „Soziale Roboter“

The elective module „Soziale Roboter“ („Social Robots“) by Prof. Dr. Oliver Bendel will be held again from April 15 to 17, 2025 at the FHNW in Olten. It is primarily aimed at prospective information systems specialists, but prospective business economists can also take part. Dr. Amol Deshmukh has been invited as a guest speaker. He previously worked for the University of Glasgow and now conducts research at ETH Zurich. In his lecture, he will present the findings from his paper „Leveraging Social Robots to Promote Hand Hygiene: A Cross-Cultural and Socio-Economic Study of Children in Diverse School Settings“. Unitree Go2, Alpha Mini, Cozmo, Vector, Aibi, Furby and Booboo from Oliver Bendel’s private Social Robots Lab will also be on site. Social Robotics Girl, a so-called GPT who specializes in this topic, will be available as a tutor throughout the event. Basic works are „Soziale Roboter“ (2021) and „300 Keywords Soziale Robotik“ (2021). At the end of the elective module, students design social robots – also with the help of generative AI – that they find useful, meaningful, or simply attractive. The elective modules have been offered since 2021 and are very popular.

Abb.: Oliver Bendel bei einem Wahlmodul mit NAO