The Need for Novelty in Social Roles: Exploring Robots in Social Roles from the Perspective of Interactional Novelty

被引:0
|
作者
Smedegaard, Catharina V. [1 ]
机构
[1] Aarhus Univ, Res Unit Robophilosophy & Integrat Social Robot, Aarhus, Denmark
关键词
Integrative Social Robotics; novelty effects; experiential novelty; interactional novelty; social phenomenology in human-robot interactions; robots in institutions; RELATIONSHIP MAINTENANCE; PERCEPTION; BRAIN;
D O I
10.3233/FAIA220682
中图分类号
TP18 [人工智能理论];
学科分类号
081104 ; 0812 ; 0835 ; 1405 ;
摘要
Human relations are inescapably premised by the human capacity for thinking and acting with deliberate deviation from predictable, habitual, patterns of thought and action (i.e., what traditional philosophy largely understands as free-will or 'spontaneity'). Whenever a human performs a given social role, this capacity should be included as a component of the subjective performance-dimension. Here, I reframe the capacity as a replenishable source of 'interactional novelty'. I then propose that social robots equally bring to social interactions their own special type of novelty experiences. Comparing the nature of two types of novelty, I argue two claims. First, whereas the human type of interactional novelty lies as a continuous potential, the robotic type of novelty may only be a temporary phenomenon. Second, while not identically realized, there are good reasons to explore to which extent human interactional novelty can be substituted by robotic types of experiential novelty. With contextual knowledge of how novelty-experiences arise, it is worth speculating whether we can develop social robot applications that simulate and sustain novelty experiences with the same or at least similar interactional novelty effects that are found in some human social roles.
引用
收藏
页码:718 / 727
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Social investigation and social novelty in zebrafish: Roles of salience and novelty
    do Nascimento, Bianca Gomes
    Maximino, Caio
    BEHAVIOURAL PROCESSES, 2023, 210
  • [2] UNDERSTANDING SOCIAL ROLES FROM A HORNEYAN PERSPECTIVE
    RENDON, D
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOANALYSIS, 1987, 47 (02): : 131 - 142
  • [3] Fluid consumption in lithium-treated rats: Roles of stimulus novelty and context novelty
    Rodriguez, Marcial
    Garcia, Zoe
    Cobo, Pablo
    Hall, Geoffrey
    BEHAVIOURAL PROCESSES, 2012, 91 (02) : 164 - 171
  • [4] Social Work is still a novelty
    Burgos Martinez, Macarena
    CUADERNOS DE TRABAJO SOCIAL, 2019, 32 (01) : 241 - 244
  • [5] ON NOVELTY OF MODERN SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
    Skobelina, Natalya A.
    TOMSK STATE UNIVERSITY JOURNAL, 2010, (336): : 46 - +
  • [6] Reaction to novelty in social animals
    deGaulejac, F
    Gallo, A
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 1996, 31 (3-4) : 3208 - 3208
  • [7] The Evaluation of Different Roles For Domestic Social Robots
    de Graaf, Maartje M. A.
    Ben Allouch, Somaya
    2015 24TH IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON ROBOT AND HUMAN INTERACTIVE COMMUNICATION (RO-MAN), 2015, : 676 - 681
  • [8] Should We Place Robots in Social Roles?
    Sharkey, Amanda
    WHAT SOCIAL ROBOTS CAN AND SHOULD DO, 2016, 290 : 34 - 36
  • [9] Roles as resources: A social roles perspective of change in value networks
    Akaka, Melissa Archpru
    Chandler, Jennifer D.
    MARKETING THEORY, 2011, 11 (03) : 243 - 260
  • [10] INTERACTIONAL CONTEXTS OF PSYCHIATRIC PATIENTS - SOCIAL ROLES + ORGANIZATIONAL IMPLICATIONS
    THRASHER, JH
    SMITH, HL
    PSYCHIATRY, 1964, 27 (04): : 389 - &