TR98-09

Interactive Storytelling Environments: Coping with Cardiac Illness at Boston\'s Children\'s Hospital


    •  Marina Umaschi-Bers, Edith K. Ackermann, Justine Cassell, Beth Donegan, Joseph Gonzalez-Heydrich, David R. DeMaso, Carol Strohecker, Sarah Lualdi, Dennis Bromley, Judith Karlin, "Interactive Storytelling Environments: Coping with Cardiac Illness at Boston\'s Children\'s Hospital", Tech. Rep. TR98-09, Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories, Cambridge, MA, July 1998.
      BibTeX TR98-09 PDF
      • @techreport{MERL_TR98-09,
      • author = {Marina Umaschi-Bers, Edith K. Ackermann, Justine Cassell, Beth Donegan, Joseph Gonzalez-Heydrich, David R. DeMaso, Carol Strohecker, Sarah Lualdi, Dennis Bromley, Judith Karlin},
      • title = {Interactive Storytelling Environments: Coping with Cardiac Illness at Boston\'s Children\'s Hospital},
      • institution = {MERL - Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories},
      • address = {Cambridge, MA 02139},
      • number = {TR98-09},
      • month = jul,
      • year = 1998,
      • url = {https://www.merl.com/publications/TR98-09/}
      • }
Abstract:

This paper describes exploration of uses of a computational storytelling environment on the Cardiology Unit of the Children\'s Hospital in Boston, during the summer of 1997. Young cardiac patients ranging from age 7 to 16 used the SAGE environment to tell personal stories and create interactive characters, as a way of coping with cardiac illness, hospitalizations, and invasive medical procedures. This pilot study is part of a larger collaborative effort between Children\'s Hospital and MERL - A Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratory, to develop a web-based application, the Experience Journal, to assist patients and their families in dealing with serious medical illness. The focus of the paper is on young patients\' uses of SAGE, on SAGE\'s affordances in the context of the hospital, and on design recommendations for the development of future computational play kits for expressing and exchanging feelings and ideas. Preliminary analysis of young patients\' stories indicates that children used different modes of interaction-direct, mediated, and differed-, depending upon what personae the narrator chooses to take on. These modes seem to vary with the mindset and health condition of the child.