000 03274nam a2200349Ia 4500
000 04966nam a22003975i 4500
001 978-3-031-28138-9
003 DE-He213
005 20240319121016.0
007 cr nn 008mamaa
008 230511s2023 sz | s |||| 0|eng d
020 _a9783031281389
_9978-3-031-28138-9
082 _a005.437;004.019
245 _aCultural Robotics: Social Robots and Their Emergent Cultural Ecologies
_cedited by Belinda J. Dunstan, Jeffrey T. K. V. Koh, Deborah Turnbull Tillman, Scott Andrew Brown.
_h[electronic resource] /
250 _a1st ed. 2023.
260 _aCham
_bSpringer International Publishing
_c2023
300 _aXVI, 277 p. 66 illus., 56 illus. in color.
_bonline resource.
520 _aThis edited collection approaches the field of social robotics from the perspective of a cultural ecology, fostering a deeper examination of the reach of robotic technology into the lived experience of diverse human populations, as well as the impact of human cultures on the development and design of these social agents. To address the broad topic of Cultural Robotics, the book is sectioned into three focus areas: Human Futures, Assistive Technologies, and Creative Platforms and their Communities. The Human Futures section includes chapters on the histories and future of social robot morphology design, sensory and sonic interaction with robots, technology ethics, material explorations of embodiment, and robotic performed sentience. The Assistive Technologies section presents chapters from community-led teams, and researchers working to adopt a strengths-based approach to designing assistive technologies for those with disability or neurodivergence. Importantly, this section contains work written by authors belonging to those communities. Creative Platforms and their Communities looks to the creative cross-disciplinary researchers adopting robotics within their art practices, those contributing creatively to more traditional robotics research, and the testing of robotics in non-traditional platforms such as museum and gallery spaces. Cultural Robotics: Social Robots and their Emergent Cultural Ecologies makes a case for the development of social robotics to be increasingly informed by community-led transdisciplinary research, to be decentralised and democratised, shaped by teams with a diversity of backgrounds, informed by both experts and non-experts, and tested in both traditional and non-traditional platforms. In this way, the field of cultural robotics as an ecological approach to encompassing the widest possible spectrum of human experience in the development of social robotics can be advanced. .
650 _aComputers and civilization.
_935186
650 _aComputers and Society.
_935187
650 _aHuman-computer interaction.
_935188
650 _aRobotics.
_935189
650 _aRobotics.
_935189
650 _aUser interfaces (Computer systems).
_935190
650 _aUser Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.
_935191
700 _aBrown, Scott Andrew.
_935192
700 _aDunstan, Belinda J.
_935193
700 _aKoh, Jeffrey T. K. V.
_935194
700 _aTurnbull Tillman, Deborah.
_935195
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-28138-9
942 _cEBK
_2ddc
999 _c15538
_d15538