Chatbots are increasingly adopted in our daily activities such as offering customer services and supporting our social activities. Yet, their potential for spiritual purpose is insufficiently explored. Interested in closing this gap, we conducted an interview study with 23 participants comprising 12 Christians, 5 Hindus, 4 Buddhists, 1 Muslim, and 1 Pagan, to probe how people who profess a religion perceive the idea of interacting with a chatbot in a spiritual context. During the interview, we also used a chatbot prototype to engage people in the speculation of a chatbot's roles in religious spaces and the desired functions. Our participants envisioned that spiritual chatbots retrieve religious information for the user. Some welcomed the idea of engaging in a religious conversation with a chatbot while others also expressed concerns of letting chatbots play an active role in religious space.
As intelligent machines continue to shape current and future work, low‐income families are expected to be the most negatively affected. To sustainably help low‐income families be better prepared for a future of working with intelligent machines, we are building an informal learning community in a poor neighborhood where we engage children and parents through a robotics club. We report our community building progress and the interviews we conducted with the children and their parents.
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