ArXiv TLDR

StoryEcho: A Generative Child-as-Actor Storytelling System for Picky-Eating Intervention

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2604.08114

Yanuo Zhou, Jun Fang, Yuntao Wang, Yi Wang, Nan Gao + 2 more

cs.HC

TLDR

StoryEcho is a generative storytelling system that helps reduce picky eating in children by engaging them in personalized stories linked to real-world food behavior.

Key contributions

  • Conducted a formative study to identify design considerations for picky-eating interventions.
  • Developed StoryEcho, a generative system where children are story actors influencing narratives via food behavior.
  • Combines non-mealtime story engagement, post-meal feedback, and behavior-informed story updates.
  • Field study showed StoryEcho increased children's willingness to try new foods and reduced parental pressure.

Why it matters

This paper presents StoryEcho, a novel generative storytelling system that actively involves children in personalized narratives to address picky eating. It effectively increases children's willingness to try new foods and reduces parental pressure, opening a promising design space for home-based behavioral support.

Original Abstract

Picky eating in children can undermine dietary diversity and the development of healthy eating habits, while also creating recurring tension in family feeding routines. Prior interventions have explored food-centered designs, enhanced utensils, and mealtime interactive systems, but few position children as active participants in intervention processes that extend beyond single mealtime interactions. To better understand everyday responses to picky eating and child-acceptable intervention mechanisms, we conducted a formative study with caregivers and kindergarten teachers. Based on the resulting design considerations and iterative stakeholder review, we designed StoryEcho, a generative child-as-actor storytelling system for picky eating intervention. StoryEcho engages children outside mealtimes through personalized stories in which the child appears as a persistent story character and later shapes story development through real-world food-related behavior. The system combines non-mealtime story engagement, lightweight post-meal feedback, and behavior-informed story updates to support repeated intervention across everyday family routines. We evaluated StoryEcho in a between-group field study with 11 families of preschool children. Results provide preliminary evidence that StoryEcho can significantly increase children's willingness to approach and try target low-preference foods while reducing parental pressure around feeding. These findings suggest the promise of generative child-as-actor storytelling as a design approach for home-based behavior support that unfolds through recurring family routines.

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