ABSTRACT

Whilst most research concentrates on the imagined future of robotics, this book brings together a group of international researchers to explore the different ways that robots and humans engage with one another at this point in history.

Robotic design is advancing at an incredible pace, and consequently the role of robots has expanded beyond mechanical work in the industrial sector to the social and domestic environment. From kitchen table pets in the shape of dinosaurs or baby seals, to robot arms that assist with eating, to self-driving cars, this book explores the psychological impact of robotic engagement, especially in domestic settings. Each chapter explores a different aspect of humanoid robotics, for example, the relationship between robotics and gender, citizenship, moral agency, ethics, inequality, and psychological development, as well as exploring the growing role of robots in education, care work, and intimate relationships.

Drawing on research from across the fields of psychology, anthropology, and philosophy, this ground-breaking volume discusses the emerging social side of robotics. By examining our relationship with robots now, this book offers a new and innovative opportunity for understanding our future with robots and robotic culture. Designing Robots, Designing Humans will be interest to researchers of artificial intelligence and humanoid robotics, as well as researchers from cognitive and social psychology, philosophy, computer science, anthropology, linguistics, and engineering backgrounds.

chapter 1|16 pages

Gotai

Corporeal aesthetics and robotic exoskeletons in Japan

chapter 2|19 pages

On humanoids, avatars and the rest of us

Gender and designing our new Others

chapter 3|15 pages

Performing the kitchen

Becoming a queering witness to the enactments of subject–object relations in a robotic kitchen lab

chapter 4|18 pages

The automation of ethics

The case of self-driving cars

chapter 6|23 pages

Material concept formation

Inequality in children’s conceptual robot imaginaries

chapter 7|21 pages

Unpacking the cultural baggage of travelling robots

How socially assistive robots are integrated in practice

chapter 8|15 pages

Robot companions for children and older people

Ethical issues and evidence