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E-raamat: Meaningful Futures with Robots: Designing a New Coexistence

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Soon, robots will leave the factories and make their way into living rooms, supermarkets, and care facilities. They will cooperate with humans in everyday life, taking on more than just practical tasks. How should they communicate with us? Do they need eyes, a screen, or arms? Should they resemble humans? Or may they enrich social situations precisely because they act so differently from humans?

Meaningful Futures with Robots: Designing a New Coexistence provides insight into the opportunities and risks that arise from living with robots in the future, anchored in current research projects on everyday robotics. As well as generating ideas for robot developers and designers, it also critically discusses existing theories and methods for social robotics from different perspectives - ethical, design, artistical and technological and presents new approaches to meaningful human-robot interaction design.

Key Features:





Provides insights into current research on robots from different disciplinary angles with a particular focus on a value-driven design. Includes contributions from designers, psychologists, engineers, philosophers, artists, and legal scholars, among others.

Licence line: Chapters 1, 3, 12, and 15 of this book are available for free in PDF format as Open Access from the individual product page at www.crcpress.com. They have been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.
Introduction: Towards Designing Meaningful Relationships with Robots 4(26)
Judith Dorrenbacher
Marc Hassenzahl
Robin Neuhaus
Ronda Ringfort-Felner
Concept and Content of the Book
30(14)
Judith Dorrenbacher
Robin Neuhaus
Ronda Ringfort-Felner
Marc Hassenzahl
Part 1 Designing a New Species-Interaction Design and Product Design of Robots
Impulses And Tools How to Design Robots with Superpowers
44(11)
Robin Neuhaus
Ronda Ringfort-Felner
Judith Dorrenbacher
Marc Hassenzahl
Perspectives Social Robots Should Mediate, Not Replace, Social Interactions
55(4)
Timo Kaerlein
Interview Neither Human nor Computer--A Symbiotic Human-Robot Collaboration in Autism Therapy
59(8)
Ronda Ringfort-Felner
Judith Dorrenbacher
Erik
Perspectives Counting Characters and Spaces--On Robot Disabilities, Robot Care, and Technological Dependencies
67(3)
Lenneke Kuijer
Impulses And Tools Designing Robots with Personality
70(9)
Lara Christoforakos
Sarah Diefenbach
Daniel Ullrich
Interview Designing Robots as Social Counterparts--A Discussion about a Technology Claiming its Own Needs
79(8)
Lara Christoforakos
Tobias Storzinger
Perspectives Falling in Love with a Machine--What Happens if the Only Affection a Person Gets is from Machines?
87(10)
Brigitta Haberland
Karsten Wendland
Janina Loh
Interview I am Listening to You!-- How to Make Different Robotic Species Speak the Same Language
97(5)
Judith Dorrenbacher
Anne Wierling
Impulses And Tools How to Really Get in Touch with Robots--Haptic Interaction Technologies for VR and Teleoperation
102(12)
Bernhard Weber
Thomas Hulin
Lisa Schiffer
Part 2 Designing Future Environments--Social Innovation Initiated by Robots
Impulses And Tools Design Fiction--The Future of Robots Needs Imagination
114(17)
Ronda Ringfort-Felner
Robin Neuhaus
Judith Dorrenbacher
Marc Hassenzahl
Perspectives Cramer's Funeral Service for Androids
131(6)
Uwe Post
Perspectives Googly Eyes
137(3)
Marc Hassenzahl
Impulses And Tools Empathizing with Robots-Animistic and Performative Methods to Anticipate a Robot's Impact
140(15)
Judith Dorrenbacher
Marc Hassenzahl
Interview From the Lab to a Real-World Supermarket--Anticipating the Chances and Challenges of a Shopping Robot
155(6)
Robin Neuhaus
Judith Dorrenbacher
I-RobEka
Interview Dominant, Persuasive or Polite?--Human Curiosity, Provocative Users and Solving Conflicts between Humans and Robots
161(8)
Judith Dorrenbacher
Robot Koop
Perspectives Seven Observations, or Why Domestic Robots are Struggling to Enter the Habitats of Everyday Life
169(6)
James Auger
Interview Is this a Patient or a Wall?-Adapting Robots from an Industrial Context to a Rehabilitation Clinic
175(8)
Jochen Feitsch
Bernhard Weber
Perspectives Robotics x Book Studies-Imagining a Robotic Archive of Embodied Knowledge
183(4)
Corinna Norrick-Ruhl
Perspectives "That's the Future, I'm Telling you"
187(3)
Antje Herden
Perspectives A Visual Commentary on Robots
190(16)
Johanna Benz
Part 3 Designing Together with People--Civic Participation and Ethical Implications Concerning Robots
Impulses And Tools Citizen Participation in Social Robotics Research
206(11)
Felix Carros
Johanna Langendorf
Dave Randall
Rainer Wieching
Volker Wulf
Interview Learning from Each Other-How Roboticists Learn from Users and How Users Teach Their Robots
217(8)
Felix Carros
Adrian Preussner
Perspectives My Friend Simsala, the Robot
225(4)
Edi Haug
Laura M. Schwengber
Interview Move Away from the Stereotypical User in the Picture-Perfect Scenario--A Plea for Early and Broad User Integration
229(5)
Stephanie Hausler-Weiss
Kilian Rohm
Tobias Storzinger
Impulses And Tools Is it Good?--A Philosophical Approach towards Ethics-Centered Design
234(17)
Catrin Misselhorn
Manuel Scheidegger
Tobias Storzinger
Perspectives Are Robots Good at Everything? A Robot in an Elementary School
251(4)
Elke Buttgereit
Perspectives The Medium has a Message--Educational Robots in a Didactic Triangle
255(4)
Scarlet Schaffrath
Perspectives The Friendly Siblings of Workhorses and Killer Robots--Becoming Alive through the Nonliving, and Feeling Blessed by a Religious Machine
259(8)
Nona Nord
Appendix
Designing with Algorithms-Reflections Based on the Book's Design
267(3)
Meike Hardt
Biographies 270(11)
Index 281
Dr. Judith Dörrenbächer is a design researcher at the chair for Ubiquitous Design / Experience and Interaction at the University of Siegen. Educated in design, her current focus is on performative methods in design, on theories about animism transferred to HCI and design (techno-animism) and on interaction and design strategies of social robots.

Ronda Ringfort-Felner is a research assistant at the chair for Ubiquitous Design / Experience and Interaction at the University of Siegen. With a background in design and HCI, her research focuses on design fiction, the design and exploration of future intelligent autonomous systems such as social robots, and the exploration of the related societal and social implications.

Robin Neuhaus is a research assistant at the chair for Ubiquitous Design / Experience and Interaction at the University of Siegen. With a background in industrial design and HCI, his current research focuses on the design of experiences and interactions with robots, voice assistants and other non-human actors.

Dr. Marc Hassenzahl is Professor for "Ubiquitous Design / Experience and Interaction" at the University of Siegen. He combines his training in psychology with a love for interaction design. With his group of designers and psychologists, he explores the theory and practice of designing pleasurable, meaningful and transforming interactive technologies.