Abstract is missing.
- Frontmatter [doi]
- Designing "Companion Artifacts": The Relational Construction of Culture and Technology in Social RoboticsSelma Sabanovic. 3-4 [doi]
- What Robots Represent... and Why It MattersRobert Sparrow. 5 [doi]
- Flourishing Isn't Free: Paying Down Our Moral and Social Debt in Robotic SystemsShannon Vallor. 6-7 [doi]
- "Why Did You Just Do That?" Explainability and Artificial Theory of Mind for Social RobotsAlan Winfield. 8-9 [doi]
- Social Robots Through the Lens of Care EthicsAimee van Wynsberghe. 10 [doi]
- Robots and Moral RevolutionsJohn Danaher. 11 [doi]
- Towards a Middle-Ground Theory of Agency for Artificial IntelligenceLouis Longin. 17-26 [doi]
- RoboLabs: Building Surfaces of IntelligibilityHenning Mayer. 27-39 [doi]
- Applying the Theory of Make-Believe to Human-Robot InteractionMatthew Rueben, Eitan Rothberg, Maja J. Mataric. 40-50 [doi]
- Sociomorphing, Not Anthropomorphizing: Towards a Typology of Experienced SocialityJohanna Seibt, Christina Vestergaard, Malene Flensborg Damholdt. 51-67 [doi]
- Of Waiters, Robots, and Friends. Functional Social Interactions vs. Close Interhuman RelationshipsTom Poljansek, Tobias Störzinger. 68-77 [doi]
- The Artificial Nature of Social Robots: A Phenomenological Interpretation of Two Conflicting Tendencies in Human-Robot InteractionPeter Remmers. 78-85 [doi]
- A Robot-Human Handshake in Space: Touch and Lively Alterity Relations in Social RoboticsChris Chesher, David Silvera Tawil. 86-95 [doi]
- The Growing Need for Reliable Conceptual Analysis in HRI Studies: The Example of the Term 'Empathy'Joanna K. Malinowska. 96-104 [doi]
- Engaging in Deep Wonder at the Experience of Encountering a Lawnmower RobotRebekka Soma. 105-113 [doi]
- Empathy and Instrumentalization: Late Ancient Cultural Critique and the Challenge of Apparently Personal RobotsJordan Joseph Wales. 114-124 [doi]
- Culturally Sustainable Social Robotics as an Empowerment TechnologyPatrick Grüneberg. 127-138 [doi]
- Mindreading in the Production of Culturally Sensitive Robot BehaviourGary Smith, Mark L. Ornelas. 139-147 [doi]
- Working Alongside Service Robots: Challenges to Workplace Identity PerformanceAnna Dobrosovestnova, Glenda Hannibal. 148-157 [doi]
- Can Current Methods in Knowledge Representation and Reasoning Make Robots Culturally Robust?Masoumeh Mansouri. 158-168 [doi]
- From Values to Design RequirementsChristoffer Madsen, Sebastian Madsen, Mikkel Mørk. 169-179 [doi]
- Persuading Youth in Civic Participation with Social Robots: What Is Appropriate?Kirsikka Kaipainen, Salla Jarske, Jari Varsaluoma, Kaisa Väänänen. 183-193 [doi]
- The "Social" of the Socially Interactive Robot: Rethinking Human-Robot Interaction Through EthnomethodologySalla Jarske, Sanna Raudaskoski, Kirsikka Kaipainen. 194-203 [doi]
- A Horizontal Approach to Communication for Human-Robot Joint Action: Towards Situated and Sustainable RoboticsKathleen Belhassein, Víctor Fernández Castro, Amandine Mayima. 204-214 [doi]
- The Material Re-Turn of the Avatar: Computational Commemoration of the Deceased via Social RobotsKirsten Brukamp. 215-226 [doi]
- "How Nice That I Could Love Someone": Science Fiction Film as a Virtual LaboratoryFrederieke Y. Jansen. 227-236 [doi]
- Stereotyping of Social Robots in Eldercare: An Explorative Analysis of Ethical Problems and Possible SolutionsMerle Weßel, Niklas Ellerich-Groppe, Mark Schweda. 239-246 [doi]
- Ascribing Gender to a Social RobotMalene Flensborg Damholdt, Christina Vestergaard, Johanna Seibt. 247-256 [doi]
- The Morality Menu ProjectOliver Bendel. 257-268 [doi]
- In Love with a Corporation Without Knowing It: An Asymmetrical RelationshipClaire Boine, Céline Castets-Renard, Aurélie Clodic, Rachid Alami. 269-281 [doi]
- Applying Integrative Social Robotics: The Case of SilbotChristoffer Madsen, Sebastian Madsen, Mikkel Mørk. 282-291 [doi]
- Social Norms for Artificial SystemsAnna Strasser. 295-304 [doi]
- Robots to Blame?Dina Babushkina. 305-315 [doi]
- The Complexity of Autonomy: A Consideration of the Impacts of Care Robots on the Autonomy of Elderly Care ReceiversShuhong Li, Aimee van Wynsberghe, Sabine Roeser. 316-325 [doi]
- Challenges for Sympathetic Robot DesignOliver Santiago Quick. 326-336 [doi]
- Nudging by Social RobotsRaffaele Rodogno. 337-345 [doi]
- Ethical Nudging of Users While They Interact with RobotsJohn P. Sullins, Sean Dougherty. 346-358 [doi]
- Preserving Personal Perspectives in Coaching TechnologyMarcus Westberg, Monika Jingar. 359-369 [doi]
- Understanding Autonomous Driving as Institutional Activity: Opening New Ways to React to Discriminatory Concerns in Autonomous DrivingManuel Dietrich. 373-383 [doi]
- Sustaining the Higher-Level Principle of Equal Treatment in Autonomous DrivingJudit Szalai. 384-394 [doi]
- Discrimination Issues in Usage-Based Insurance for Traditional and Autonomous VehiclesMartim Brandão. 395-406 [doi]
- Protomoral Machines: The Evolution of Morality as a Guideline for Robot EthicsTomi Kokkonen. 409-418 [doi]
- Moral Machines: Using Natural Morality to Guide Artificial MoralityAleksandra E. Kornienko. 419-430 [doi]
- Permissibility-Under-A-Description Reasoning for Deontological RobotsFelix Lindner 0001. 431-439 [doi]
- Culturally Aware Social Robots That Carry Humans Inside Them, Protected by Defeasible Argumentation SystemsSelmer Bringsjord, Michael Giancola, Naveen Sundar Govindarajulu. 440-456 [doi]
- Considering Human-Computer ConflictsDave B. Miller. 457-466 [doi]
- What Is Robot Ethics? ...And Can It Be Standardized?Michael Funk. 469-480 [doi]
- On Human Freedom in a Posthuman Future: Sources of Dialogical TensionsRaya A. Jones. 481-489 [doi]
- Anthropomorphism in Social Robotics: Simondon and the Human in TechnologyJuho Rantala. 490-500 [doi]
- Becoming Cyborg: Liberating One's Real Species-Being. A Materialist Ontology of the PosthumanGerrit Krueper. 501-509 [doi]
- Social Models for Social RoboticsAurélie Clodic, Frank Dignum, Víctor Fernández Castro, Raul Hakli. 515-519 [doi]
- Context-Awareness for Social RobotsHelena Anna Frijns, Oliver Schürer. 520-524 [doi]
- Robots as Ideal Moral Agents per the Moral Responsibility SystemDane Leigh Gogoshin. 525-534 [doi]
- The Social Uncanniness of Robotic CompanionsGuy Hoffman. 535-539 [doi]
- What Does It Take to Be a Social Agent?Víctor Fernández Castro, Raul Hakli, Aurélie Clodic. 540-549 [doi]
- Should Robots Have Standing? The Moral and Legal Status of Social RobotsDavid J. Gunkel. 553-557 [doi]
- Who or What is to Blame? Personality and Situational Attributions of Robot BehaviorAutumn Edwards, Chad Edwards. 558-562 [doi]
- Could Autonomous Vehicles Become Accidental Autonomous Moral Machines?Martin Cunneen. 563-569 [doi]
- Greening the Machine Question: Towards an Ecological Framework for Assessing Robot RightsJoshua C. Gellers. 570-574 [doi]
- Do We Need to Understand Social Robots to Grant Them Rights?Anne Gerdes. 575-577 [doi]
- The Rights of (Social) RobotsDavid J. Gunkel. 578-581 [doi]
- Robots in Religious ContextsSimon Balle, Charles Ess. 585-591 [doi]
- Pioneering Religion in Robotics: An Historical PerspectiveGabriele Trovato. 592-595 [doi]
- Does AI Have Buddha-Nature? Reflections on the Metaphysical, Soteriological, and Ethical Dimensions of Including Humanoid Robots in Religious Rituals from one Mahāyāna Buddhist PerspectiveGereon Kopf. 596-600 [doi]
- Robots' Spiritual SuperpowersDiana Löffler, Marc Hassenzahl. 601-605 [doi]
- On the Magical Dimension of Religion. Theological Questions Concerning Robots in Religious ContextsIlona Nord, Thomas Schlag. 606-610 [doi]
- Between Luther and Buddhism: Scandinavian Creation Theology and RobophilosophyCharles Ess. 611-616 [doi]
- Trust in Robots and AIJesse de Pagter, Guglielmo Papagni, Laura Crompton, Michael Funk, Isabel Schwaninger. 619-622 [doi]
- A Critical Analysis of the Trust Human Agents Have in Computational and Embodied AILaura Crompton. 623-631 [doi]
- Gamification of Trust in HRI?Michael Funk, Bernhard Dieber, Horst Pichler, Mark Coeckelbergh. 632-642 [doi]
- Conceptualizing Trust in Objects of Speculation: A Narrative Approach to Robot GovernanceJesse de Pagter. 643-652 [doi]
- Interpretable Artificial Agents and Trust: Supporting a Non-Expert Users PerspectiveGuglielmo Papagni, Sabine T. Köszegi. 653-662 [doi]
- Practice-Based Trust Research: Towards Situated Human-Robot Interaction in Older People's Living SpacesIsabel Schwaninger. 663-665 [doi]
- Think and Perform TankOliver Schürer. 669-677 [doi]