How pedagogical agents communicate with students : A two-phase systematic review
Sikström, P., Valentini, C., Sivunen, A., & Kärkkäinen, T. (2022). How pedagogical agents communicate with students : A two-phase systematic review. Computers and Education, 188, Article 104564. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compedu.2022.104564
Published in
Computers and EducationDate
2022Discipline
ViestintäTekniikkaKoulutusteknologia ja kognitiotiedeHuman and Machine based Intelligence in LearningViestinnän johtaminenBasic or discovery scholarshipHyvinvoinnin tutkimuksen yhteisöTyön ja johtamisen muuttuminen digitaalisessa ajassaCommunicationEngineeringLearning and Cognitive SciencesHuman and Machine based Intelligence in LearningCorporate CommunicationBasic or discovery scholarshipSchool of WellbeingEmergent work in the digital eraCopyright
© 2022 the Authors
Technological advancements have improved the capabilities of pedagogical agents to communicate with students. However, an increased use of pedagogical agents in learning environments calls for a deeper understanding of student–agent communication to assess the effectiveness of pedagogical agents in learning. This study is a two-phase systematic review of scientific papers on pedagogical agent communication research published between 2010 and 2020, including review papers and original research papers. In the first phase, this study analyses literature reviews and meta-analyses to find the status and research gaps. The findings indicate that pedagogical agents' characteristics and impact on learning have been reviewed, but pedagogical agent communication and its relation to learning have not. In the second phase, the empirical studies of pedagogical agent communication are reviewed and classified into three categories that describe how pedagogical agent communication facilitates students' learning through (1) students' intrapersonal communication processes, (2) interpersonal communication between students and a pedagogical agent, and (3) by facilitating learning in a group. The findings show that pedagogical agent communication can enhance learning through intrapersonal communication of motivation, self-regulation, self-efficacy, and metacognition. At the interpersonal level, pedagogical agents aim to scaffold learning by giving feedback, prompts, and hints from learning processes and learning results. Pedagogical agents also support learning in a group by facilitating discussions and directing students' collaboration. Despite rapid technological advancements, pedagogical agents are not on the level to communicate fluently and human-like, which is likely to reduce their effectiveness and usability in learning. The review concludes that pedagogical agents’ communication needs to be developed toward adaptive, adequate, relational, and logical communication, which requires a multidisciplinary theoretical approach, the use of artificial intelligence, affective computing, and psychometric assessments. Recommendations for future research addressing the gaps identified in this systematic review are discussed.
...
Publisher
ElsevierISSN Search the Publication Forum
0360-1315Keywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/146548786
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Additional information about funding
This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or non-for-profit sectors.License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Pedagogical Agents Communicating and Scaffolding Students’ Learning : High School Teachers’ and Students’ Perspectives
Sikström, Pieta; Valentini, Chiara; Sivunen, Anu; Kärkkäinen, Tommi (Elsevier, 2024)Pedagogical agents (PAs) communicate verbally and non-verbally with students in digital and virtual reality/augmented reality learning environments. PAs have been shown to be beneficial for learning, and generative artificial ... -
A two-phase systematic literature review on the use of serious games for sustainable environmental education
Ahmadov, Tarlan; Karimov, Ayaz; Durst, Susanne; Saarela, Mirka; Gerstlberger, Wolfgang; Wahl, Mike Franz; Karkkainen, Tommi (Taylor & Francis, 2024)This study explores the landscape of serious games for sustainable environmental education, focusing on game types, theoretical foundations, and pedagogical approaches to provide valuable insights for educators, researchers, ... -
Serious games in Science and Mathematics Education : a scoping umbrella review
Karimov, Ayaz; Saarela, Mirka; Kärkkäinen, Tommi (Serious Games Society, 2024)Many studies focused on reviewing the use of serious games as part of Science and Mathematics Education. While previous reviews focused on various educational levels and subjects, narrowing the scope to Science and Mathematics ... -
What HMC Teaches Us About Authenticity
Etzrodt, Katrin; Kim, Jihyun; van der Goot, Margot; Prahl, Andrew; Choi, Mina; Craig, Matthew; Dehnert, Marco; Engesser, Sven; Frehmann, Katharina; Grande, Luis; Leo-Liu, Jindong; Liu, Diyi; Mooshammer, Sandra; Rambukkana, Nathan; Rogge, Ayanda; Sikström, Pieta; Son, Rachel; Wilkenfeld, Nan; Xu, Kun; Zhang, Renwen; Zhu, Ying; Edwards, Chad (Communication and Social Robotics Labs, 2024)This paper delves into what the application of authenticity to Human-Machine Communication (HMC) can teach us about authenticity and us as HMC researchers and as a community. Inspired by the 2023 pre-conference “HMC: ... -
What do we do when we analyse the temporal aspects of computer-supported collaborative learning? A systematic literature review
Lämsä, Joni; Hämäläinen, Raija; Koskinen, Pekka; Viiri, Jouni; Lampi, Emilia (Elsevier BV, 2021)To better understand the premises for successful computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL), several studies over the last 10 years have analysed the temporal aspects of CSCL. We broadly define the temporal aspects ...