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[Commlist] CFP: Affect and Embodiment in Human-Robot Interaction
Fri Jan 24 16:14:46 GMT 2020
Thought some of you would be interested in this upcoming workshop I’m
co-organizing – we’d like a mixture of theorists and cultural and media
studies scholars amongst the engineers, designers, and computer
scientists… email me if you have questions.
*HRI 2020 Call for Papers: ‘Affect and Embodiment in HRI’ Workshop*
15th Annual ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human Robot
Interaction, Cambridge, UK, March 23-26, 2020
https://sites.google.com/view/affect-and-embodiment-hri
*Rationale*
How do forms of robot embodiment influence the emotional state of the
user? In Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), affect and embodiment have
become prominent areas of inquiry. The physicality of robotic systems is
therefore a crucial factor for user interactions in shared spaces. This
recognition of machinic corporeality shares theoretical affinities with
recent interests in the humanities and social sciences. In the cognitive
sciences and philosophy, for example, the body has long been regarded
with suspicion, but recent theories of embodied, extended, enactive, or
ecological (4E) cognition have meant a renewed significance for the body
as the locus of perception and action, inseparable from memory,
learning, and reasoning activity. Meanwhile, the ‘Affective Turn’ in the
social sciences recognizes the role of affects and embodiment in the
production of intersubjective experiences.
Designing and evaluating the affectivity of the robot body has become a
frontier topic in HRI, with previous studies emphasizing the importance
of robot embodiment for human-robot communication. In particular, there
is growing interest in how the tactile, haptic materiality of the robot
mediates users’ affective and emotional states.
*Workshop Objectives*
1) to identify relevant questions for the design of robotic bodies with
high affective qualities;
2) to consider cross-currents in ethical, philosophical, and
methodological questions in studying emotional relations between humans
and robots; and
3) to foster synergies among designers, engineers, and social scientists
in affective robotics.
*Topics of interest*
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
* Current challenges in designing affective physical embodiment in
robots—materials, kinesthetics, sensory experience, and behaviors
enabled by affective computing
* Acknowledging a user’s emotional needs within an interaction and how
those needs are met or not met by the robot
* Novel affective experiences afforded by interaction with robots
* Studying unintended consequences of affective relationships with robots
* Developing design frameworks and methodologies to approach the above
questions
* Developing theoretical frameworks and social science methodologies
for evaluating affect and embodiment in human-robot interactions
*Types of contribution*
The workshop includes three types of contributions: full papers (15
mins), ignite talks (5-10 mins), and a hands-on interaction session
based on co-design methods. We will accept four full presentation papers
and six ignite talks, each of which will raise a significant question or
problem around affect and embodiment in HRI. The workshop includes two
interactive, participatory activities. The first is a ‘Mapping and
Clustering’ exercise based on co-design methods. The second is a
round-table discussion with themed questions. Developed papers from the
workshop will be collected and published in a special issue of a journal
such as /Body & Society /or /The Senses and Society./
*Workshop schedule*
* Introductory remarks and short position statements
* Full presentation papers (4 x 15 mins)
* Ignite talks (6 x 5-10 mins)
* Interactive session - group hands-on activity with post-it notes
based on co-design methods (1 hour)
* Roundtable/conclusion with themed questions
Detailed program will be published on the Program page
<https://sites.google.com/view/affect-and-embodiment-hri/program> closer
to the conference date.
*Important Dates*
21 February 2020: Submission Deadline for Extended Abstracts (500-800 words)
1 March 2020: Notification of acceptance for presentations
23 March 2020: half-day Workshop
*Format*
Please submit an extended abstract in MS Word format. Abstracts should
be 500-800 words (references do not count towards submission length);
this applies to both submissions for full presentations or ignite talks.
/Please indicate in your abstract whether your submission is for a full
presentation or an ignite talk/.
*How to Submit*
Please submit in MS Word to (affectandembodimenthri /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(affectandembodimenthri /at/ gmail.com)>, with the email subject of
"Submission for Workshop HRI2020".
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