Assistive robotics: research challenges and ethics education initiatives
Carme Torras
- Year
- 2019
- Citations
- 5
Abstract
Assistive robotics is a fast growing field aimed at helping healthcarers in hospitals, rehabilitation centers and nursery homes, as well as empowering people with reduced mobility at home, so that they can autonomously fulfill their daily living activities. The need to function in dynamic human-centered environments poses new research challenges: robotic assistants need to have friendly interfaces, be highly adaptable and customizable, very compliant and intrinsically safe to people, as well as able to handle deformable materials.\n\t\t\t\t Besides technical challenges, assistive robotics raises also ethical defies, which have led to the emergence of a new discipline: Roboethics. Several institutions are developing regulations and standards, and many ethics education initiatives include contents on human-robot interaction and human dignity in assistive situations.\n\t\t\t\t In this paper, the state of the art in assistive robotics is briefly reviewed, and educational materials from a university course on Ethics in Social Robotics and AI focusing on the assistive context are presented.
Keywords
Related papers
The spread of true and false news online
Soroush Vosoughi, Deb Roy, Sinan Aral
2018
The Uncanny Valley [From the Field]
Masahiro Mori, Karl F. MacDorman, Norri Kageki
2012
Emotional design: why we love (or hate) everyday things
2004
Measurement Instruments for the Anthropomorphism, Animacy, Likeability, Perceived Intelligence, and Perceived Safety of Robots
Christoph Bartneck, Dana Kulić, Elizabeth A. Croft +1 more
2008