Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift/Konferencebidrag i tidsskrift /Bidrag til avis › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning › peer review
Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift/Konferencebidrag i tidsskrift /Bidrag til avis › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning › peer review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Integrative Social Robotics, Value-Driven Design, and Transdisciplinarity
AU - Seibt, Johanna
AU - Damholdt, Malene Flensborg
AU - Vestergaard, Christina
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - “Integrative Social Robotics” (ISR) is a new approach or general method for generating social robotics applications in a responsible and “culturally sustainable” fashion. Currently social robotics is caught in a basic difficulty we call the “triple gridlock of description, evaluation, and regulation”. We briefly recapitulate this problem and then present the core ideas of ISR in the form of five principles that should guide the development of applications in social robotics. Characteristic of ISR is to intertwine a mixed method approach (i.e., conducting experimental, quantitative, qualitative, and phenomenological research for the same envisaged application) with conceptual and axiological analysis as required in professional studies in applied ethics; moreover, ISR is value-driven and abides by the “Non-Replacement Principle”: Social robots may only do what humans should but cannot do. We briefly compare ISR to other value-sensitive or value-directed design models, with a view to the task of overcoming the triple gridlock. Finally, working from an advanced classification of pluridiscplinary research, we argue that ISR establishes a research format that can turn social robotics into a new transdiscipline.
AB - “Integrative Social Robotics” (ISR) is a new approach or general method for generating social robotics applications in a responsible and “culturally sustainable” fashion. Currently social robotics is caught in a basic difficulty we call the “triple gridlock of description, evaluation, and regulation”. We briefly recapitulate this problem and then present the core ideas of ISR in the form of five principles that should guide the development of applications in social robotics. Characteristic of ISR is to intertwine a mixed method approach (i.e., conducting experimental, quantitative, qualitative, and phenomenological research for the same envisaged application) with conceptual and axiological analysis as required in professional studies in applied ethics; moreover, ISR is value-driven and abides by the “Non-Replacement Principle”: Social robots may only do what humans should but cannot do. We briefly compare ISR to other value-sensitive or value-directed design models, with a view to the task of overcoming the triple gridlock. Finally, working from an advanced classification of pluridiscplinary research, we argue that ISR establishes a research format that can turn social robotics into a new transdiscipline.
KW - Care-centered value-sensitive design
KW - Collingridge dilemma
KW - Design for values
KW - Integrative Social Robotics
KW - Ontology of asymmetric sociality
KW - Participatory design
KW - Responsible robotics
KW - Technomoral change
KW - Transdisciplinarity
KW - Value-sensitive design
KW - ontology of asymmetric sociality
KW - participatory design
KW - responsible robotics
KW - CARE
KW - care-centered value-sensitive design
KW - design for values
KW - transdisciplinarity
KW - ANTHROPOMORPHISM
KW - FRAMEWORK
KW - technomoral change
KW - value-sensitive design
U2 - 10.1075/is.18061.sei
DO - 10.1075/is.18061.sei
M3 - Journal article
VL - 21
SP - 111
EP - 144
JO - Interaction Studies
JF - Interaction Studies
SN - 1572-0373
IS - 1
ER -