Auflistung nach Schlagwort "ethnomethodology"
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- WorkshopbeitragDoing Scheduling? The Construction of Agency and Memory while Programming a Reminder Robot with a Person with Severe Brain Injury(Mensch und Computer 2019 - Workshopband, 2019) Krummheuer, Antonia; Rehm, Matthias; Rodil, KasperThe paper argues that the field of human-robot interaction needs a distributed and socially situated understanding of reminding and scheduling practices to meet the needs of people with cognitive disabilities in the design of reminder robots. These results are based on a embodied interaction analysis of video recorded interactions of a co-creation process in which the participants test a reminder-robot prototype that was designed for and with people with acquired brain injury.
- WorkshopbeitragLaughing at the robot: Incongruent robot actions as laughables(Mensch und Computer 2019 - Workshopband, 2019) Due, BrianLaughter is a common occurrence when people interact with social robots. Among the many reasons for the production of laughter, one phenomenon is when the robot responds inadequately and or in a contextually inappropriate manner to the ongoing interaction. This paper is grounded in studies from a semi-experimental setting in which course participants naturally interact with the humanoid robot Pepper in a Danish context. Building upon video recordings and ethnomethodological conversation analysis, the paper explores situations where the robot produces an action that somehow diverges from the expected trajectory of social actions and consequently establishes an incongruency. This research contributes to our understanding of the finetuned nature of human sociality and hence requirements for Human-Robot-Interaction.
- WorkshopbeitragLearning how to talk: Co-producing action with and around voice agents(Mensch und Computer 2019 - Workshopband, 2019) Reeves, Stuart; Fischer, Joel E; Porcheron, Martin; Sikveland, ReinThe domestication of voice interfaces, made accessible in consumer devices such as the Apple HomePod, Google Home or the Amazon Echo, has led to everyday talk becoming intertwined with—as well as acting as—device input. Whether intending to interact with voice interfaces or not, conversationalists must learn ‘how to talk’ to and around them as a matter of this domestication work. Taking an ethnomethodological conversation analysis approach, this paper interrogates some of the ways in which conversationalists deploy a variety of methods so as to manage and design input in line with the strictures of voice interface capabilities and collaboratively accomplish—co-produce—actions with and around such devices.