论文标题
IEEE信任,接受和社会提示在人机互动中 - Scrita 2022车间
IEEE Trust, Acceptance and Social Cues in Human-Robot Interaction -- SCRITA 2022 Workshop
论文作者
论文摘要
人类机器人互动中的信任,接受和社会提示 - Scrita是与IEEE RO-MAN会议一起举行的一系列讲习班的第五版。该研讨会的重点是应对人与机器人之间动态的挑战和发展,以促进短暂的互动和不同领域的持久关系,包括教育,服务,协作,伴侣,伴侣,养老院和医学机器人技术。特别是,我们旨在调查机器人如何操纵(即创建,改善和恢复)人们接受和信任他们,以实现人类与人之间的富有成果和成功的共存。尽管在研究和评估影响机器人在受控或短期(重复互动)设置中的人们接受和信任的因素方面取得了进步,开发服务和个人机器人是不可能的,这些服务和个人机器人受到了对操作员的监督的接受和信任,但仍然对机器人,AI和HRI领域的科学家提出了一个开放的挑战。在这种非结构化的静态和动态的以人为中心的环境中,机器人应该能够学习和使其行为适应情境环境,以及人们的先前经验,学到的联系,他们的期望以及他们和机器人预测和理解彼此行为的能力。尽管以前的版本珍视了该领域的主要研究人员的参与以及几位杰出的邀请演讲者,他们解决了该研究领域的一些基本要点,但我们希望继续进一步探索信任对机器人技术的作用,以有效地设计和开发社会上可接受和可信的机器人,以在野外部署”。 网站:https://scrita.herts.ac.uk
The Trust, Acceptance and Social Cues in Human-Robot Interaction - SCRITA is the 5th edition of a series of workshops held in conjunction with the IEEE RO-MAN conference. This workshop focuses on addressing the challenges and development of the dynamics between people and robots in order to foster short interactions and long-lasting relationships in different fields, from educational, service, collaborative, companion, care-home and medical robotics. In particular, we aimed in investigating how robots can manipulate (i.e. creating, improving, and recovering) people's ability of accepting and trusting them for a fruitful and successful coexistence between humans and people. While advanced progresses are reached in studying and evaluating the factors affecting acceptance and trust of people in robots in controlled or short-term (repeated interactions) setting, developing service and personal robots, that are accepted and trusted by people where the supervision of operators is not possible, still presents an open challenge for scientists in robotics, AI and HRI fields. In such unstructured static and dynamic human-centred environments scenarios, robots should be able to learn and adapt their behaviours to the situational context, but also to people's prior experiences and learned associations, their expectations, and their and the robot's ability to predict and understand each other's behaviours. Although the previous editions valued the participation of leading researchers in the field and several exceptional invited speakers who tackled down some fundamental points in this research domains, we wish to continue to further explore the role of trust in robotics to present groundbreaking research to effectively design and develop socially acceptable and trustable robots to be deployed "in the wild". Website: https://scrita.herts.ac.uk