What Could Possibly Go Wrong? A Case Study in Responsible Robotics

#Robotics #ResponsibleRobotics #Robots #Robot #SocialRobot #SocialRobotAccident #Knowledge #Reasoning #DecisionMaking
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Robot accidents are inevitable. In this talk I will outline a draft framework for social robot accident investigation; a framework that proposes both the technology and processes that would allow social robot accidents to be investigated and lessons learned. I shall describe a series of simulated robot accidents and investigations, enacted with volunteers and real robots. And to conclude I will position accident investigation within the practice of responsible robotics and argue that social robotics without accident investigation would be no less irresponsible than aviation without air accident investigation.



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  • m.garcia-constantino@ulster.ac.uk

  • Co-sponsored by Ulster University


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Alan of University of the West of England (UWE), UK

Topic:

What Could Possibly Go Wrong? A Case Study in Responsible Robotics

Robot accidents are inevitable. In this talk I will outline a draft framework for social robot accident investigation; a framework that proposes both the technology and processes that would allow social robot accidents to be investigated and lessons learned. I shall describe a series of simulated robot accidents and investigations, enacted with volunteers and real robots. And to conclude I will position accident investigation within the practice of responsible robotics and argue that social robotics without accident investigation would be no less irresponsible than aviation without air accident investigation.

Biography:

Alan Winfield is Professor of Robot Ethics at the University of the West of England (UWE), Bristol, UK, Visiting Professor at the University of York, and Associate Fellow of the Cambridge Centre for the Future of Intelligence. Alan co-founded the Bristol Robotics Laboratory where his research is focussed on the science, engineering and ethics of cognitive robotics. Alan is an advocate for robot ethics; he chairs the advisory board of the Responsible Technology Institute at the University of Oxford and has co-drafted new standards on ethical risk assessment and transparency.

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