The Cambridge Handbook of the Law, Policy, and Regulation for Human-Robot Interaction
Herausgeber: Barfield, Woodrow; Pagallo, Ugo; Weng, Yueh-Hsuan
The Cambridge Handbook of the Law, Policy, and Regulation for Human-Robot Interaction
Herausgeber: Barfield, Woodrow; Pagallo, Ugo; Weng, Yueh-Hsuan
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This volume provides a unique perspective on an emerging area of scholarship and legislative concern: the law, policy, and regulation of human-robot interaction (HRI). The increasing intelligence and human-likeness of social robots points to a challenging future for determining appropriate laws, policies, and regulations related to the design and use of AI robots. Japan, China, South Korea, and the US, along with the European Union, Australia and other countries are beginning to determine how to regulate AI-enabled robots, which concerns not only the law, but also issues of public policy and…mehr
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This volume provides a unique perspective on an emerging area of scholarship and legislative concern: the law, policy, and regulation of human-robot interaction (HRI). The increasing intelligence and human-likeness of social robots points to a challenging future for determining appropriate laws, policies, and regulations related to the design and use of AI robots. Japan, China, South Korea, and the US, along with the European Union, Australia and other countries are beginning to determine how to regulate AI-enabled robots, which concerns not only the law, but also issues of public policy and dilemmas of applied ethics affected by our personal interactions with social robots. The volume's interdisciplinary approach dissects both the specificities of multiple jurisdictions and the moral and legal challenges posed by human-like robots. As robots become more like us, so too will HRI raise issues triggered by human interactions with other people.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 888
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Oktober 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 260mm x 183mm x 52mm
- Gewicht: 1831g
- ISBN-13: 9781009386661
- ISBN-10: 1009386662
- Artikelnr.: 69518718
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 888
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Oktober 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 260mm x 183mm x 52mm
- Gewicht: 1831g
- ISBN-13: 9781009386661
- ISBN-10: 1009386662
- Artikelnr.: 69518718
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Forward; Preface; 1. Introduction to law, policy, and regulations for
human-robot interaction; 2. Anthropomorphism and human-robot interaction
(HRI); 3. Human-robot interaction implications: for law, policy, and
regulations; 4. Trust-based interfaces in hr interaction. context,
communication and information; 5. Robots, regulation, and the changing
nature of public space; 6. Challenges of the legal protection of human
lives in the time of anthropomorphic robots; 7. What will robot laws look
like? Considering code, AI and human laws; 8. Oversight boards for
regulation of AI-enabled robots; 9. Building a smart legal ecosystem for
industry 5.0; 10. I, Robot? legal personality for robots and the android
fallacy; 11. 'Legal being': going beyond the debate of legal personhood for
'intelligent' non-humans; 12. Robot romance; 13. Robot natives: future
design and regulations for baby robot interaction; 14. Should social and
assistive robots integrated within home- and healthcare services be
universally designed?; 15. Regulating emotional artificial intelligence in
cars; 16. Some critical thoughts on anthropomorphic social robot design;
17. A critical analysis of consent in human-robot interaction; 18. Rosie is
a rental: what thriving interactive robotics could mean for our society;
19. Bots against bias: critical next steps for human-robot interaction; 20.
Robot ethics for interaction with humanoid, AI-enabled and expressive
robots; 21. The ubuntu robot: towards a relational conceptual framework for
intercultural robotics; 22. Ethical, legal, and social concerns in the
application of social robots in religious settings: a case study of the
catholic robot santo; 23. Helpers for helpers: ethical and legal
considerations for long-term care robots; 24. Ethical design and
standardization for robot governance; 25. Eight recommendations for ethical
and legal assessments of robotic systems interacting with humans; 26.
Cultural differences in social robot perception; 27. Moral interaction with
social robots; 28. I'm not like the others, I'm your friend: towards an
ethics for AI in behavioural interventions and choice architectures; 29.
Personal autonomy and machine autonomy in human-robot interaction; 30.
Robots in a civilized society: should robots be taught to adhere to social
norms?; 31. Racialization and bias toward humanoids; 32. Privacy
considerations for socially assistive robots; 33. Privacy and transparency
in human-robot interaction; 34. Robotic torts; 35. Limits of criminal law
regulation of robotics: the Russian federation law perspective; 36. Robot
criminal liability; 37. The use of artificial intelligence on criminal
proceedings with robot judges as a different dimension; 38. The first
amendment and robots in virtual and physical worlds; 39. Humanoid robots
and consumer law and policy; 40. Therapy without therapists: human-robot
interaction under the EU medical device regulation and the artificial
intelligence act; 41. Legal analysis of a social robot: the appropriation
of ideas and labor; 42. Considering the tax policy implications of
automation and AI-enabled robots; 43. Humanoid AI systems for healthcare in
outer space: a new generation of opportunities and legal puzzles; 44.
Ensuring accountability for robots and AI under criminal law; 45.
Intelligent industrial and service robots: a discussion of international
human rights; 46. Concluding thoughts on future directions in law, policy,
and regulations for human-robot interaction.
human-robot interaction; 2. Anthropomorphism and human-robot interaction
(HRI); 3. Human-robot interaction implications: for law, policy, and
regulations; 4. Trust-based interfaces in hr interaction. context,
communication and information; 5. Robots, regulation, and the changing
nature of public space; 6. Challenges of the legal protection of human
lives in the time of anthropomorphic robots; 7. What will robot laws look
like? Considering code, AI and human laws; 8. Oversight boards for
regulation of AI-enabled robots; 9. Building a smart legal ecosystem for
industry 5.0; 10. I, Robot? legal personality for robots and the android
fallacy; 11. 'Legal being': going beyond the debate of legal personhood for
'intelligent' non-humans; 12. Robot romance; 13. Robot natives: future
design and regulations for baby robot interaction; 14. Should social and
assistive robots integrated within home- and healthcare services be
universally designed?; 15. Regulating emotional artificial intelligence in
cars; 16. Some critical thoughts on anthropomorphic social robot design;
17. A critical analysis of consent in human-robot interaction; 18. Rosie is
a rental: what thriving interactive robotics could mean for our society;
19. Bots against bias: critical next steps for human-robot interaction; 20.
Robot ethics for interaction with humanoid, AI-enabled and expressive
robots; 21. The ubuntu robot: towards a relational conceptual framework for
intercultural robotics; 22. Ethical, legal, and social concerns in the
application of social robots in religious settings: a case study of the
catholic robot santo; 23. Helpers for helpers: ethical and legal
considerations for long-term care robots; 24. Ethical design and
standardization for robot governance; 25. Eight recommendations for ethical
and legal assessments of robotic systems interacting with humans; 26.
Cultural differences in social robot perception; 27. Moral interaction with
social robots; 28. I'm not like the others, I'm your friend: towards an
ethics for AI in behavioural interventions and choice architectures; 29.
Personal autonomy and machine autonomy in human-robot interaction; 30.
Robots in a civilized society: should robots be taught to adhere to social
norms?; 31. Racialization and bias toward humanoids; 32. Privacy
considerations for socially assistive robots; 33. Privacy and transparency
in human-robot interaction; 34. Robotic torts; 35. Limits of criminal law
regulation of robotics: the Russian federation law perspective; 36. Robot
criminal liability; 37. The use of artificial intelligence on criminal
proceedings with robot judges as a different dimension; 38. The first
amendment and robots in virtual and physical worlds; 39. Humanoid robots
and consumer law and policy; 40. Therapy without therapists: human-robot
interaction under the EU medical device regulation and the artificial
intelligence act; 41. Legal analysis of a social robot: the appropriation
of ideas and labor; 42. Considering the tax policy implications of
automation and AI-enabled robots; 43. Humanoid AI systems for healthcare in
outer space: a new generation of opportunities and legal puzzles; 44.
Ensuring accountability for robots and AI under criminal law; 45.
Intelligent industrial and service robots: a discussion of international
human rights; 46. Concluding thoughts on future directions in law, policy,
and regulations for human-robot interaction.
Forward; Preface; 1. Introduction to law, policy, and regulations for
human-robot interaction; 2. Anthropomorphism and human-robot interaction
(HRI); 3. Human-robot interaction implications: for law, policy, and
regulations; 4. Trust-based interfaces in hr interaction. context,
communication and information; 5. Robots, regulation, and the changing
nature of public space; 6. Challenges of the legal protection of human
lives in the time of anthropomorphic robots; 7. What will robot laws look
like? Considering code, AI and human laws; 8. Oversight boards for
regulation of AI-enabled robots; 9. Building a smart legal ecosystem for
industry 5.0; 10. I, Robot? legal personality for robots and the android
fallacy; 11. 'Legal being': going beyond the debate of legal personhood for
'intelligent' non-humans; 12. Robot romance; 13. Robot natives: future
design and regulations for baby robot interaction; 14. Should social and
assistive robots integrated within home- and healthcare services be
universally designed?; 15. Regulating emotional artificial intelligence in
cars; 16. Some critical thoughts on anthropomorphic social robot design;
17. A critical analysis of consent in human-robot interaction; 18. Rosie is
a rental: what thriving interactive robotics could mean for our society;
19. Bots against bias: critical next steps for human-robot interaction; 20.
Robot ethics for interaction with humanoid, AI-enabled and expressive
robots; 21. The ubuntu robot: towards a relational conceptual framework for
intercultural robotics; 22. Ethical, legal, and social concerns in the
application of social robots in religious settings: a case study of the
catholic robot santo; 23. Helpers for helpers: ethical and legal
considerations for long-term care robots; 24. Ethical design and
standardization for robot governance; 25. Eight recommendations for ethical
and legal assessments of robotic systems interacting with humans; 26.
Cultural differences in social robot perception; 27. Moral interaction with
social robots; 28. I'm not like the others, I'm your friend: towards an
ethics for AI in behavioural interventions and choice architectures; 29.
Personal autonomy and machine autonomy in human-robot interaction; 30.
Robots in a civilized society: should robots be taught to adhere to social
norms?; 31. Racialization and bias toward humanoids; 32. Privacy
considerations for socially assistive robots; 33. Privacy and transparency
in human-robot interaction; 34. Robotic torts; 35. Limits of criminal law
regulation of robotics: the Russian federation law perspective; 36. Robot
criminal liability; 37. The use of artificial intelligence on criminal
proceedings with robot judges as a different dimension; 38. The first
amendment and robots in virtual and physical worlds; 39. Humanoid robots
and consumer law and policy; 40. Therapy without therapists: human-robot
interaction under the EU medical device regulation and the artificial
intelligence act; 41. Legal analysis of a social robot: the appropriation
of ideas and labor; 42. Considering the tax policy implications of
automation and AI-enabled robots; 43. Humanoid AI systems for healthcare in
outer space: a new generation of opportunities and legal puzzles; 44.
Ensuring accountability for robots and AI under criminal law; 45.
Intelligent industrial and service robots: a discussion of international
human rights; 46. Concluding thoughts on future directions in law, policy,
and regulations for human-robot interaction.
human-robot interaction; 2. Anthropomorphism and human-robot interaction
(HRI); 3. Human-robot interaction implications: for law, policy, and
regulations; 4. Trust-based interfaces in hr interaction. context,
communication and information; 5. Robots, regulation, and the changing
nature of public space; 6. Challenges of the legal protection of human
lives in the time of anthropomorphic robots; 7. What will robot laws look
like? Considering code, AI and human laws; 8. Oversight boards for
regulation of AI-enabled robots; 9. Building a smart legal ecosystem for
industry 5.0; 10. I, Robot? legal personality for robots and the android
fallacy; 11. 'Legal being': going beyond the debate of legal personhood for
'intelligent' non-humans; 12. Robot romance; 13. Robot natives: future
design and regulations for baby robot interaction; 14. Should social and
assistive robots integrated within home- and healthcare services be
universally designed?; 15. Regulating emotional artificial intelligence in
cars; 16. Some critical thoughts on anthropomorphic social robot design;
17. A critical analysis of consent in human-robot interaction; 18. Rosie is
a rental: what thriving interactive robotics could mean for our society;
19. Bots against bias: critical next steps for human-robot interaction; 20.
Robot ethics for interaction with humanoid, AI-enabled and expressive
robots; 21. The ubuntu robot: towards a relational conceptual framework for
intercultural robotics; 22. Ethical, legal, and social concerns in the
application of social robots in religious settings: a case study of the
catholic robot santo; 23. Helpers for helpers: ethical and legal
considerations for long-term care robots; 24. Ethical design and
standardization for robot governance; 25. Eight recommendations for ethical
and legal assessments of robotic systems interacting with humans; 26.
Cultural differences in social robot perception; 27. Moral interaction with
social robots; 28. I'm not like the others, I'm your friend: towards an
ethics for AI in behavioural interventions and choice architectures; 29.
Personal autonomy and machine autonomy in human-robot interaction; 30.
Robots in a civilized society: should robots be taught to adhere to social
norms?; 31. Racialization and bias toward humanoids; 32. Privacy
considerations for socially assistive robots; 33. Privacy and transparency
in human-robot interaction; 34. Robotic torts; 35. Limits of criminal law
regulation of robotics: the Russian federation law perspective; 36. Robot
criminal liability; 37. The use of artificial intelligence on criminal
proceedings with robot judges as a different dimension; 38. The first
amendment and robots in virtual and physical worlds; 39. Humanoid robots
and consumer law and policy; 40. Therapy without therapists: human-robot
interaction under the EU medical device regulation and the artificial
intelligence act; 41. Legal analysis of a social robot: the appropriation
of ideas and labor; 42. Considering the tax policy implications of
automation and AI-enabled robots; 43. Humanoid AI systems for healthcare in
outer space: a new generation of opportunities and legal puzzles; 44.
Ensuring accountability for robots and AI under criminal law; 45.
Intelligent industrial and service robots: a discussion of international
human rights; 46. Concluding thoughts on future directions in law, policy,
and regulations for human-robot interaction.