
What Social Robots Can and Should Do
Description
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This book contains the proceedings of the conference "What Social Robots Can and Should Do," Robophilosophy 2016 / TRANSOR 2016, held in Aarhus, Denmark, in October 2016. The conference is the second event in the biennial Robophilosophy conference series, this time combined with an event of the Research Network for Transdisciplinary Studies in Social Robotics (TRANSOR). Featuring 13 plenaries and 74 session and workshop talks, the event turned out to be the world's largest conference in Humanities research in and on social robotics.
The book is divided into 3 sections: Part I and Part III contain the abstracts of plenary lectures and contributions to 6 workshops: Artificial Empathy; Co-Designing Children Robot Interaction; Human-Robot Joint Action; Phronesis for Machine Ethics?; Robots in the Wild; and Responsible Robotics. Part II contains short papers for presentations in 7 thematically organized sessions: methodological issues; ethical tasks and implications; emotions in human robot interactions; education, art and innovation; artificial meaning and rationality; social norms and robot sociality; and perceptions of social robots.
The book will be of interest to researchers in philosophy, anthropology, sociology, psychology, linguistics, cognitive science, robotics, computer science, and art. Since all contributions are prepared for an interdisciplinary readership, they are highly accessible and will be of interest to policy makers and educators who wish to gauge the challenges and potentials of putting robots in society.
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Content
- Title Page
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Contents
- Part I. Abstracts for Plenary Lectures
- Can Phronetic Robots Be Engineered by Computational Logicians? No ... and Yes
- Is It Wrong to Kick a Robot? Towards a Relational and Critical Robot Ethics and Beyond
- Other Problems: Rethinking Ethics in the Face of Social Robots
- Power in Human Robot Interactions
- Why and How Should Robots Behave Ethically?
- Robots That Have Free Will
- Robotics and Art, Computationalism and Embodiment
- Are Sex Robots as Bad as Killing Robots?
- Cyborg Able-Ism and Recuperative Robotics: Forecasts from Japan
- Should We Place Robots in Social Roles?
- Artificial Phronesis and the Social Robot
- Part II. Session Papers and Extended Abstracts
- 1. Methodological Issues
- A Generic Scale for Assessment of Attitudes Towards Social Robots: The ASOR-5
- We, Anthrobot: Learning from Human Forms of Interaction and Esprit de Corps to Develop More Plural Social Robotics
- Robots as Confederates: How Robots Can and Should Support Research in the Humanities
- Bringing the Notion of Everyday Life Back to the Center of Social Robotics and HRI
- Using Language Games as a Way to Investigate Interactional Engagement in Human-Robot Interaction
- Robot Choreography: Performance Paradigms for Experimental HRI Setups
- If It's Not Broken, Don't Fix It?" An Inquiry Concerning the Understanding of Child-Robot Interaction
- Are We Really Adressing the Human in Human-Robot Interaction? Adopting the Phenomenologically-Situated Paradigm
- Integrative Social Robotics" - A New Method Paradigm to Solve the Description Problem And the Regulation Problem?
- 2. Ethical Tasks and Implications
- Tacit Security? Roboethics and Societal Challenges of 'Social Robotic Information- and Cyberwar'
- The Role of Phronesis in Robot Ethics
- The Master/iSlave Dialectic: Post (Hegelian) Phenomenology and the Ethics of Technology
- Robots, Autonomy, and Responsibility
- Social Robotics, Elderly Care, and Human Dignity: A Recognition-Theoretical Approach
- Structural Discrimination and Autonomous Vehicles: Immunity Devices, Trump Cards and Crash Optimisation
- The Ethical Impact of an Increased Presence of Robots on Human-Human Interaction (HHI) Within Aging Populations
- Robots and Moral Obligations
- Social Robots, Privacy, and Ownership of Data: Some Problems and Suggestions
- 3. Emotions in Human Robot Interactions
- An Interdisciplinary Approach to Improving Cognitive Human-Robot Interaction - A Novel Emotion-Based Model
- Can Artificial Systems Have Genuine Emotions? The Enactive Approach to Affectivity and Artificial Systems
- Motions with Emotions?
- 4. Education, Art, and Innovation
- Robot Enhancement of Cognitive and Ethical Capabilities of Humans
- Experiences from Long-Term Implementation of Social Robots in Danish Educational Institutions
- Are You Talkin' to Me?" A Study of Social Robots Featuring in Robotic Art
- Students' Normative Perspectives on Classroom Robots
- Speculative Co-Design of Robots
- 5. Artificial Meaning and Rationality
- Computability of Rational Action
- The Principle of Double Effect Applied to Ethical Dilemmas of Social Robots
- What Your Computer Still Can't Know: A Refutation of Bringsjord's Refutation of Searle's Refutation of Bostrom and Floridi
- 6. Social Norms and Robot Sociality
- Polite Interactions with Robots
- Making Place for Social Norms in the Design of Human-Robot Interaction
- Robots and Human Sociality: Normative Expectations, the Need for Recognition, and the Social Bases of Self-Esteem
- How to Count Multiple Personal-Space Intrusions in Social Robot Navigation
- 7. Perceptions of Social Robots
- I Am Her(e): Physical/Cognitive Robots and Human Intimacy in the Imagery of Spike Jonze's Movies
- Moral Patients: What Drives the Perceptions of Moral Actions Towards Humans and Robots?
- Sense of Social Atmosphere (Kuki) and Robots That Should Read the Situation to Be Safe
- Magical Thinking and Empathy Towards Robots
- Trust in Human-Robot Interaction: The Role of Appearance
- Human-Animal Analogy in Human-Robot Interaction
- Part III. Workshop Descriptions and Abstracts of Workshop Contributions
- Studying Robots in the Wild
- Commitment and Agency Management in Joint Action
- Artificial Empathy: New Frontiers
- Phronesis for Machine Ethics? Can Robots Perform Ethical Judgments?
- Co-Designing Child-Robot Interactions
- Responsible Robotics: Bridging the Gap Between Moral Philosophy and Applied Ethics in Robotics
- Subject Index
- Author Index
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