<https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2022/sep/28/voice-assistants-could-hinder-childrens-social-and-cognitive-development>

From reminding potty-training toddlers to go to the loo to telling bedtime 
stories and being used as a “conversation partner”, voice-activated smart 
devices are being used to help rear children almost from the day they are born.

But the rapid rise in voice assistants, including Google Home, Amazon Alexa and 
Apple’s Siri could, new research suggests, have a long-term impact on 
children’s social and cognitive development, specifically their empathy, 
compassion and critical thinking skills.

“The multiple impacts on children include inappropriate responses, impeding 
social development and hindering learning opportunities,” said Anmol Arora, 
co-author of research published in the journal Archives of Disease in Childhood.

A key concern is that children attribute human characteristics and behaviour to 
devices that are, said Arora, “essentially a list of trained words and sounds 
mashed together to make a sentence.”

The children anthropomorphise and then emulate the devices, copying their 
failure to alter their tone, volume, emphasis or intonation. Another issue is 
the machines’ lack of automatic expectation for children to say please or thank 
you.

Devices are also limited in the types of questions they can respond to. “As a 
result,” Arora said. “Children are going to be learning very narrow forms of 
questioning and always in the form of a demand.”

There are also problems with recognising different accents. “If a child is 
particularly young, they might well not be able to pronounce particular words 
properly and then there’s a risk their words might be misinterpreted and 
they’re exposed to something inappropriate,” he said, citing an example where a 
10-year-old girl was exposed to an online challenge where she was told to touch 
a live electric plug with a coin.

“These devices don’t understand what they’re saying,” he said. “All they’re 
doing is regurgitating some information in response to a narrow query, which it 
might have misunderstood anyway, without any real understanding of safety or 
who’s listening to it.”

Dr Ádám Miklósi, who recently published a study showing that use of smartphones 
and tablets are ‘rewiring’ children’s brains with long-term effects, called the 
research “important” and said more needed to be done to get companies to take 
the issue seriously.

“At the moment, these devices are very primitive because the people who develop 
them don’t care about human interaction or their impact on children’s 
development,” he said.

“They know how adults use these devices but the way children use them, and the 
impact they have on children, is very different,” he added. “We need a lot more 
research, as well as ethical guidelines for their use by children”

But Dr Caroline Fitzpatrick, the Canada Research Chair in Digital Media Use by 
Children and Its Implications for Promoting Togetherness: An Ecosystemic 
Approach, said she thought there was little cause for concern.

“It’s true that children need rich context and cues to learn and develop 
vocabulary which at present, they can’t get through interactions with 
technology because it only provides very minimal information and tools and 
context,” she said.

“A child who was already timid or who spent too much time on their device might 
develop lower quality social skills and social competence than their peers, as 
well as difficulty using basic politeness formulations and poor non-verbal 
communication skills – such as interrupting and not making eye contact,” she 
said. “Those children would have lower quality relationships with their peers, 
teachers and family members and increased social isolation.

“But as long as parents keep to the recommended limits for children, and 
they’re getting a healthy amount of interaction from their caregivers and 
peers, then I don’t think there should be cause for alarm,” she added.

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