Auflistung nach Schlagwort "social robotics"
1 - 4 von 4
Treffer pro Seite
Sortieroptionen
- ZeitschriftenartikelCategorizing Social Robots with Respect to Dimensions Relevant to Ethical, Social and Legal Implications(i-com: Vol. 19, No. 1, 2020) Störzinger, Tobias; Carros, Felix; Wierling, Anne; Misselhorn, Catrin; Wieching, RainerThe aim of this paper is to suggest a framework for categorizing social robots with respect to four dimensions relevant to an ethical, legal and social evaluation. We argue that by categorizing them thusly, we can circumvent problematic evaluations of social robots that are often based on overly broad and abstract considerations. Instead of questioning, for example, whether social robots are ethically good or bad in general, we instead propose that different configurations of (and combinations thereof) the suggested dimensions entail different paradigmatic challenges with respect to ethical, legal and social issues (ELSI). We therefore encourage practitioners to consider these paradigmatic challenges when designing social robots to find creative design solutions.
- WorkshopbeitragRobots for Public and Social Spaces - Design for Intent Communication, Collaboration and Acceptance(Mensch und Computer 2023 - Workshopband, 2023) Häkkilä, Jonna; Kassem, Khaled; Kirjavainen, Emma; Kraus, Johannes; Michahelles, Florian; Müller, Heiko; Pfleging, Bastian; Seyffer, Norman; Trost, Kai ErikIntent communication is crucial for human-robot interactions, allowing robots to understand and respond to human intentions and enabling humans to comprehend potentially autonomous robots’ intentions. Social robots have become increasingly popular in various fields, from healthcare to education, due to their ability to interact with humans naturally and intuitively. Enabling seamless communication between robots and humans is a key challenge in developing effective social robots. This workshop explores the intersection of intent communication and user experience in social robotics, with a focus on human-centered human-robot interaction.The workshop aims to bring together researchers, developers, and practitioners from academia and industry to discuss recent advances in intent communication and user experience design in social robotics. Participants can present their research, share experiences, and engage in interactive discussions with other attendees. The workshop provides a forum for collaboration and knowledge exchange to advance the state-of-the-art in social robotics and HRI. This is the second iteration of the RoboX workshop at MuC.
- ZeitschriftenartikelSay what you want, I’m not listening! A conversational self-reflection robot that does not parse user speech(i-com: Vol. 22, No. 1, 2023) González, Adriana Lorena; Geiskkovitch, Denise Y.; Young, James E.We present a conversational social robot behaviour design that draws from psychotherapy research to support individual self-reflection and wellbeing, without requiring the robot to parse or otherwise understand what the user is saying. This simplicity focused approached enabled us to intersect the well-being aims with privacy and simplicity, while achieving high robustness. We implemented a fully autonomous and standalone (not network enabled) prototype and conducted a proof-of-concept study as an initial step to test the feasibility of our behaviour design: whether people would successfully engage with our simple behaviour and could interact meaningfully with it. We deployed our robot unsupervised for 48 h into the homes of 14 participants. All participants engaged with self-reflection with the robot without reporting any interaction challenges or technical issues. This supports the feasibility of our specific behaviour design, as well as the general viability of our non-parsing simplicity approach to conversation, which we believe to be an exciting avenue for further exploration. Our results thus pave the way for further exploring how conversational behaviour designs like ours may support people living with loneliness.
- Workshopbeitrag"A Stubborn Child" - How Robot Sounds are Oriented to in Everyday Situated Interaction at Home(Mensch und Computer 2019 - Workshopband, 2019) Pelikan, HannahHumans make sense of robot actions in the situated context that these actions occur in. This paper takes a conversation analytic approach in studying how the social robot Cozmo is received in a family home, focusing on the non-lexical sounds that the robot uses to communicate. Preliminary findings suggest that participants treat the robot similar to a young child or pet and orient to the robot’s sounds in the local context of the interaction.