European Commission logo
English English
CORDIS - EU research results
CORDIS

Responsible Ethical Learning with Robotics

Deliverables

Finalizing the REELER roadmap

Together with the Consortium, P1 AU will finalize the REELER Roadmap (D9.2), the main project deliverable. The final version of the REELER Roadmap is to be finished and distributed to all project partners in the beginning of M36.

Computational model of economic and labour market effect of investing in robotics

In connection with Consortium Meeting, P4 UHOH will facilitate a workshop with consortium partners during which we use the computational laboratory to experiment with alternative routines, network configurations, meeting setups, etc. to come to recommendation on enhanced user-stakeholder-roboticist learning & collaboration interactions.

Agent Based Model (ABM) of collaborative learning in responsible robotics design

"P4 UHOH will develop an agent-based computational laboratory to experiment with variations of independent and intermediate variables (e.g. learning routines, network configurations of user–stakeholder–robot designers, phases and frequency of meetings) to study the simulated collaborative learning outcome. P4 UHOH will collaborate with all consortium partners to operationally define and implement the collaboration, learning and design heuristics (output WP 5+6+7) in agent-based computer code in C# applications. The computer simulation outcome will be validated together with consortium partners."

Dissemination of REELER Roadmap at end conference, through networks and other channels of communication

P1 AU will host and be in charge of organising the practical aspects of the end conference in Copenhagen in M36. Representatives from each partner will contribute with ideas for the conference agenda. All project members will participate in the conference and representatives from each partner will present the elements of the REELER roadmap that fall within their field of expertise.

REELER online, interactive toolbox

P2 ABACUS will design a set of management tools to ease the access and use of the REELER Roadmap by robot designers. An online toolbox (D7.3) the REELER Roadmap will be developed and tested as final output of the task. The toolbox is an engine accessible through the REELER website, aiming at making the roadmap accessible from the point of view of the designer/developer. The basic concept is to allow surfing the results of the REELER research by means of keywords and parameters suitable to identify specific navigation paths in terms of expected end users of the robotic solution, its level of maturity according to the human proximity model and other relevant factor in design and development pointed out in the REEER project. P3 ABACUS is responsible for presenting the toolbox at the end conference for all stakeholders, representatives of REP and Mini-Publics.

The REELER Website

P1 AU is in charge of setting up the REELER website (www.reeler.eu) (D9.1).

Publications

Working Paper 04_Decisions and Values. Engineering design as a pragmatic and sociomaterial negotiation process

Author(s): Jessica Sorenson
Published in: REELER working paper series, 2018, ISBN 978-87-7684-580-3
Publisher: Aarhus University

Working Paper 03_If we had a specific idea of the product 12 months ago, it would never be what we have today!

Author(s): Stephan Hansen
Published in: REELER working paper series, 2018, ISBN 978-87-7684-581-0
Publisher: Aarhus University

Working Paper 01_Understanding innovation processes: An overview of evolutionary innovation models

Author(s): Sophie Urmetzer, Andreas Pyka
Published in: REELER working paper series, 2017, ISBN 978-87-7684-608-4
Publisher: REELER

Working Paper 02_Feeding assistive robotics, socio-technical imaginaries and care

Author(s): Niels Christian Mossfeldt Nickelsen
Published in: REELER working paper series, 2017, ISBN 978-87-7684-600-8
Publisher: Aarhus University

Working paper 6_The economic impact of robotics and artificial intelligence

Author(s): Ben Vermeulen, Andreas Pyka, Mirheta Omeroviv
Published in: 2017, ISBN 978-87-7684-544-5
Publisher: REELER

Working paper 5_Social drama An experiment in the Corporate Research department of an industrial robot company

Author(s): Nadine Bender
Published in: REELER Working paper series, 2019
Publisher: REELER

Working paper 7_Towards responsible robotics through cultural change and lived ethics

Author(s): Karolina Zawieska
Published in: 2019, ISBN 978-87-7684-545-2
Publisher: REELER

The Impact of Automation on Employment: Just the Usual Structural Change?

Author(s): Ben Vermeulen, Jan Kesselhut, Andreas Pyka, Pier Saviotti
Published in: Sustainability, Issue 10/5, 2018, Page(s) 1661, ISSN 2071-1050
Publisher: MDPI Open Access Publishing
DOI: 10.3390/su10051661

Special Issue on Ethnography in Human-Robot Interaction Research

Author(s): Cathrine Hasse, Stine Trentemøller, Jessica Sorenson
Published in: Paladyn, Journal of Behavioral Robotics, Issue 10/1, 2019, Page(s) 180-181, ISSN 2081-4836
Publisher: De Gryter
DOI: 10.1515/pjbr-2019-0015

Posthuman learning: AI from novice to expert?

Author(s): Cathrine Hasse
Published in: AI & SOCIETY, Issue 34/2, 2019, Page(s) 355-364, ISSN 0951-5666
Publisher: Springer Verlag
DOI: 10.1007/s00146-018-0854-4

Robot use cases for real needs: A large-scale ethnographic case study

Author(s): Leon Bodenhagen, Kerstin Fischer, Trine S. Winther, Rosalyn M. Langedijk, Mette M. Skjøth
Published in: Paladyn, Journal of Behavioral Robotics, Issue 10/1, 2019, Page(s) 193-206, ISSN 2081-4836
Publisher: De Gryter
DOI: 10.1515/pjbr-2019-0014

Imagining and tinkering with assistive robotics in care for the disabled

Author(s): Niels Christian Mossfeldt Nickelsen
Published in: Paladyn, Journal of Behavioral Robotics, Issue 10/1, 2019, Page(s) 128-139, ISSN 2081-4836
Publisher: De Gryter
DOI: 10.1515/pjbr-2019-0009

Doing autoethnography of social robots: Ethnographic reflexivity in HRI

Author(s): Bohkyung Chun
Published in: Paladyn, Journal of Behavioral Robotics, Issue 10/1, 2019, Page(s) 228-236, ISSN 2081-4836
Publisher: De Gryter
DOI: 10.1515/pjbr-2019-0019

How robots challenge institutional practices

Author(s): Cathrine Hasse
Published in: Learning, Culture and Social Interaction, 2018, ISSN 2210-6561
Publisher: Elsevier BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.lcsi.2018.04.003

Studying robots outside the lab: HRI as ethnography

Author(s): Lasse Blond
Published in: Paladyn, Journal of Behavioral Robotics, Issue 10/1, 2019, Page(s) 117-127, ISSN 2081-4836
Publisher: De Gryter
DOI: 10.1515/pjbr-2019-0007

Ethics and inscription in social robot design. A visual ethnography

Author(s): Jamie Wallace
Published in: Paladyn, Journal of Behavioral Robotics, Issue 10/1, 2019, Page(s) 66-76, ISSN 2081-4836
Publisher: De Gryter
DOI: 10.1515/pjbr-2019-0003

Toward a pragmatic and social engineering ethics

Author(s): Jessica Sorenson
Published in: Paladyn, Journal of Behavioral Robotics, Issue 10/1, 2019, Page(s) 207-218, ISSN 2081-4836
Publisher: De Gryter
DOI: 10.1515/pjbr-2019-0018

The Role of Network Topology and the Spatial Distribution and Structure of Knowledge in Regional Innovation Policy: A Calibrated Agent-Based Model Study

Author(s): Ben Vermeulen, Andreas Pyka
Published in: Computational Economics, Issue 52/3, 2018, Page(s) 773-808, ISSN 0927-7099
Publisher: Kluwer Academic Publishers
DOI: 10.1007/s10614-017-9776-3

The Use of Ethnography to Identify and Address Ethical, Legal, and Societal (ELS) Issues

Author(s): Cathrine Hasse, Stine Trentemøller, Jessica Sorenson
Published in: Companion of the 2018 ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction - HRI '18, 2018, Page(s) 393-394, ISBN 9781-450356152
Publisher: ACM Press
DOI: 10.1145/3173386.3173560

Evolutionary programming of product design policies. An agent-based model study

Author(s): Ben Vermeulen, Bin-Tzong Chie, Shu-Heng Chen, Andreas Pyka
Published in: 2017 21st Asia Pacific Symposium on Intelligent and Evolutionary Systems (IES), 2017, Page(s) 1-6, ISBN 978-1-5386-0743-5
Publisher: IEEE
DOI: 10.1109/iesys.2017.8233552

Roboethics as a Research Puzzle

Author(s): Karolina Zawieska, Ben Vermuelen
Published in: 2019 14th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), 2019, Page(s) 612-613, ISBN 978-1-5386-8555-6
Publisher: IEEE
DOI: 10.1109/hri.2019.8673271

Searching for OpenAIRE data...

There was an error trying to search data from OpenAIRE

No results available