InicioEmotional attachment to machines

InicioEmotional attachment to machines

Emotional attachment to machines

New ways of relationship-building in Japan

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Publicado el mercredi 16 de octobre de 2019

Resumen

Currently, technologies that foster emotional connections between humans and digital beings are perceived as a threat by many. Because emotional devices are considered to be make-believe systems based on ‘simulation’ (which is often confused with lying, deceit or fraud), emotional technologies could potentially be suspected of affecting human sexual identity or disrupting social bonds. This Symposium will examine the ways in which humans form intimate relationships with ‘emotionally-intelligent entities’ (robots, digital characters, downloadable boyfriend…) and what purposes these relationships to machines serve for them. 

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Argument

Recently, Japanese society has been witnessing a rise in intimate attachment to information and communication systems such as emotional robots, holographic spouses, downloadable boyfriends and augmented reality partners. Some users are now tackling the social stigma associated with artificial worlds, up to the point where they openly ‘marry’ their favorite ‘2D character’ by organizing pretend weddings or filling out legally-invalid marriage licenses. Also, the game industry has started to address the demand for ‘delusional love’ (mōsō ren’ai) and – although it is still a niche market – they are increasingly targeting a more mainstream audience. With the proliferation of sophisticated electronic devices, this rising phenomenon of emotional attachment to artificial entities is likely to further expand in Japan and globally. How could such ways of bonding be understood and explained? During the course of an international and interdisciplinary conference, the discussion will involve the ways in which humans form intimate relationships with ‘emotionally-intelligent entities’ and what purposes these relationships to machines serve for them. 

Program

Friday Oct 25, 2019 | 9:30–18:30 

  • 9:45–10:00 | Elena GIANNOULIS & EMTECH Team
: Introduction
  • 
10:00–11:15 | Keynote I – Paul DUMOUCHEL (Ritsumeikan University, Japan): Desiring Machines
  • 11:15–12:00 | Kōhei OGAWA (Osaka University, Japan): Can Androids be a Social Entity for Us?


  • 
14:00–14:45 | Tatsuya NOMURA (Ryukoku University, Japan): Rapport with Robots and a Possibility of Its Danger
  • 14:45–15:30 | Agnès GIARD (Freie Universität Berlin, Germany): Marrying a Digital Creature, Fake Weddings in 2.5D Space 
  • 16:00–16:45 | Hidenobu SUMIOKA (Hiroshi Ishiguro Laboratories; Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International, Japan)
: Mediated Social Touch to Build Human Intimate Relationship 
  • 
16:45–17:30 | Nobuhiro TAKAHASHI (The University of Electro-Communications; 
Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan): Expression, Transmission, and Archiving of Humanity by Using “Interactive Humanoid Mediums”
  • 17:30–18:30 | Sense-Roid Workshop (All participants are invited to test the Sense-Roid)




Saturday  Oct 26, 2019 | 10:15–17:30 

  • 10:30–11:30 | Keynote II – Marc STEINBERG (Concordia University, Canada): Producing Intimacy: Characters and/as Mobile Media
  • 11:30–12:15 | Giulia DE TOGNI (University of Edinburgh, UK): Feeling the Heart in the Robot: Will ‘Robotic Hearts’ replace Human Hearts in AI-driven Health and Social Care Systems?
  • 
14:00–14:45 | Anne ARONSSON (University of Zurich, Switzerland): Social Robots in Elderly Care: The Turn toward Emotional Machines in Contemporary Japan
  • 14:45–15:30 | Véronique AUBERGÉ (Laboratoire d’Informatique de Grenoble, France): 
“Socio-Affective Glue Robots" and Elderly Isolated People
  • 16:00–16:45 | Erez GOLANI SOLOMON (Waseda University, Japan; Bezalel Academy of Arts & Design, Israel)
: A Temple is a Machine for the Dead, and for the Living
  • 16:45–17:30 | Panel Discussion. Chair: Agnès Giard / Panelists: Paul Dumouchel, Kōhei Ogawa, Carman Ng (University of Bremen), 
Marc Steinberg, Hidenobu Sumioka 

Organized by

  • Elena Giannoulis 
  • Agnès Giard
  • Berthold Frommann

Informations

Université Libre de Berlin - Freie Universität Berlin: Henry Ford Building, Lecture Hall B 

Free entrance

Working languages : English 

https://www.geschkult.fu-berlin.de/en/e/emtech/project/index.html

Lugares

  • Henry Ford Building, Lecture Hall B - Freie Universität Berlin, Garystr. 35, Berlin
    Berlín, Alemania

Fecha(s)

  • vendredi 25 de octobre de 2019
  • samedi 26 de octobre de 2019

Palabras claves

  • robot, digital technology, virtual character, emotional commodity, Japan, AI

Contactos

  • Agnès Giard
    courriel : aniesu [dot] giard [at] gmail [dot] com

Fuente de la información

  • Agnès Giard
    courriel : aniesu [dot] giard [at] gmail [dot] com

Para citar este anuncio

« Emotional attachment to machines », Coloquio, Calenda, Publicado el mercredi 16 de octobre de 2019, https://calenda-formation.labocleo.org/688777

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