This work illustrates how artistic robotic systems can provide a reservoir of unfamiliarity and a basis for speculation, to open the field toward new ways of thinking about HRI. We reflect on a collaborative project between design students, a media art studio, and design researchers working with the baggage handling department of the Schiphol airport. Engaging with the industrial context, we developed ‘meta-behaviours’ - abstracted ideas of processes carried out on the worksite–and passed these over to the students who translated them into robotic enactions using a predefined hardware developed by the media art studio. The resulting visit experience challenges the audience to decode the installation in terms of meta-behaviours and their possible relations to industrial HRI. We used this to reflect on the value of conducting artistic and speculative work in HRI and to distill actionable recommendations for future research.
Spatial Robotic Experiences as a Ground for Future HRI Speculations / Murray-Rust, Dave; Lupetti, Maria Luce; Ianniello, Alessandro; Gorbet, Matt; Van Der Helm, Aadjan; Filthaut, Liliane; Chiu, Adrian; Beesley, Philip. - (2024), pp. 57-70. (Intervento presentato al convegno HRI '24: ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction tenutosi a Boulder, Colorado (USA) nel March 11 - 15, 2024) [10.1145/3610978.3640793].
Spatial Robotic Experiences as a Ground for Future HRI Speculations
Lupetti, Maria Luce;
2024
Abstract
This work illustrates how artistic robotic systems can provide a reservoir of unfamiliarity and a basis for speculation, to open the field toward new ways of thinking about HRI. We reflect on a collaborative project between design students, a media art studio, and design researchers working with the baggage handling department of the Schiphol airport. Engaging with the industrial context, we developed ‘meta-behaviours’ - abstracted ideas of processes carried out on the worksite–and passed these over to the students who translated them into robotic enactions using a predefined hardware developed by the media art studio. The resulting visit experience challenges the audience to decode the installation in terms of meta-behaviours and their possible relations to industrial HRI. We used this to reflect on the value of conducting artistic and speculative work in HRI and to distill actionable recommendations for future research.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2986947