Expansion of TWB’s Multilingual conversational AI in Nigeria
TWB will expand the engagement for chatbots for COVID-19, by increasing the number of languages, using SMS, and including elements that increase engagement and referral rates. The solution will particularly target women and will support the expansion of the solution to new contexts and prepare for future health challenges.
Sylvia Kaawe, Program Lead
Arjun Thomas, Product Manager and Technical Lead
- Respond (Decrease transmission & spread), such as: Optimal preventive interventions & uptake maximization, Cutting through “infodemic” & enabling better response, Data-driven learnings for increased efficacy of interventions
A recent TWB survey of humanitarian staff in over 30 emergency contexts found around 75% felt accurate content on COVID-19 was lacking in local languages and accessible formats to meet communities’ information needs.
The 1.5 million displaced people who live in camps in northeast Nigeria speak 30 to 40 languages. The UN’s pre-COVID needs assessment found that over 41% of households couldn’t understand written information in Hausa, the main language of humanitarian communication. Even before COVID, TWB found that 245,000 people struggled to get any information they understood. Official communication is, mostly, not in the first languages of local people, and trust is adversely affected by a negative history of relations between the region and the center of government. It is particularly difficult for women to access reliable information.
Most people prefer face-to-face communications; COVID restrictions have made this nearly impossible. People turn to WhatsApp groups, friends and family, local radio, social media platforms such as Facebook, SMS messages by various actors and (often poorly informed) health communicators.
That’s a problem because reliable communication is the foundation of controlling disease transmission and spread. The COVID-19 pandemic has led to an urgent need for new ways to communicate.
TWB’s chatbots are designed to target people who speak marginalized languages. Shehu, for example, targets the 1.5 million displaced people in northeast Nigeria; it currently speaks 3 languages, making the content accessible to a large number of the displaced population. However, we have found that, because it relies on smartphone access, Shehu is mostly used by men. In addition, it does not currently include one of the major languages, Fulfulde, of the population of the northeast, nor does it include the language that five million women in the east speak, Igbo. Most of these women do have access to mobile phones and use SMS messaging. This grant would allow us to reach almost 500,000 more people in the northeast, in addition to about 5 million women who speak Igbo.
The team working on Shehu is based in NE Nigeria and speak the languages of the bot; we are designing interactions that engage people in a way that they are familiar, listening to them and responding to their questions in their own language in a way that feels natural. Further engagement efforts will be developed by expanding this team, with support from the global team.
- Pilot: A project, initiative, venture, or organisation deploying its research, product, service, or business/policy model in at least one context or community
Executive Director