TY - GEN
T1 - Sociomorphing, Not Anthropomorphizing
T2 - Robophilosophy 2020
AU - Seibt, Johanna
AU - Vestergaard, Christina
AU - Damholdt, Malene Flensborg
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Social robotics and HRI are in need of a unified and differentiated theoretical framework where, relative to interaction context, robotic properties can be related to types of human experiences and interactive dispositions. The aim of this paper is to contribute to this task by providing new descriptive tools. In social robotics and HRI it is commonly assumed that social interactions with robots are due to ‘anthropomorphizing’. We challenge this assumption and argue, on conceptual and empirical grounds, that social interactions with robots are not always the result of anthropomorphizing, i.e., the projection of imaginary or fictional human social capacities, but of sociomorphing, i.e., the perception of actual non-human social capacities. Sociomorphing can take many forms which phenomenally manifest themselves in various types of experienced sociality. We very briefly sketch core elements of the descriptive framework OASIS (the Ontology of Asymmetric Social Interactions) in order to show how one might develop a classificatory system for types of experienced sociality.
AB - Social robotics and HRI are in need of a unified and differentiated theoretical framework where, relative to interaction context, robotic properties can be related to types of human experiences and interactive dispositions. The aim of this paper is to contribute to this task by providing new descriptive tools. In social robotics and HRI it is commonly assumed that social interactions with robots are due to ‘anthropomorphizing’. We challenge this assumption and argue, on conceptual and empirical grounds, that social interactions with robots are not always the result of anthropomorphizing, i.e., the projection of imaginary or fictional human social capacities, but of sociomorphing, i.e., the perception of actual non-human social capacities. Sociomorphing can take many forms which phenomenally manifest themselves in various types of experienced sociality. We very briefly sketch core elements of the descriptive framework OASIS (the Ontology of Asymmetric Social Interactions) in order to show how one might develop a classificatory system for types of experienced sociality.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85098846250&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3233/FAIA200900
DO - 10.3233/FAIA200900
M3 - Conference contribution to proceeding
SN - 9781643681542
T3 - Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications
SP - 51
EP - 67
BT - Culturally Sustainable Social Robotics
A2 - Nørskov, Marco
A2 - Seibt, Johanna
A2 - Quick, Oliver Santiago
PB - IOS Press
CY - Amsterdam
Y2 - 18 August 2020 through 21 August 2020
ER -