The European Parliament’s Resolution of 16 February 2017 about Robotics, paragraph 50 deals with the possibility of joint actions made by human beings and robots. Dealing with joint actions, however, entails speaking of sharing goals, values, norms, plans, etc. and, as a consequence, it seems to assume only people being involved. The paper is intended to explore what it means to attribute joint actions to human-robot interaction. It starts from the description of a general account of joint actions as interpersonal actions and takes into consideration the possibility for the human-robot couple to be the subject of such a kind of action. In order to better explain this point, the paper takes the interaction with a social robot as PARO as an e...
How must we understand joint action between humans and robots? Responding to Knoblich &\ud Sebanz (2...
In this chapter, the author proposes a theoretical framework for evaluating the ethical acceptabilit...
This document is an extended version of the one published in the proceedings of RoboPhilosophy confe...
The analysis presented is focused on the interaction among social robots and humans. It is here stat...
This paper contributes to the debate in the ethics of social robots on how or whether to treat socia...
In this paper, the author proposes a theoretical framework for drawing a line between acceptable and...
In this paper, the author proposes a theoretical framework for drawing a line between acceptable and...
In this paper, the author proposes a theoretical framework for drawing a line between acceptable and...
In this paper, the author proposes a theoretical framework for drawing a line between acceptable and...
In this paper, the author proposes a theoretical framework for drawing a line between acceptable and...
In this paper, the author proposes a theoretical framework for drawing a line between acceptable and...
When people interact with socially interactive robots on a regular basis, it could be that people st...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Currently, human-robot interactions are constructed according to the rules of human-human interactio...
Currently, human-robot interactions are constructed according to the rules of human-human interactio...
How must we understand joint action between humans and robots? Responding to Knoblich &\ud Sebanz (2...
In this chapter, the author proposes a theoretical framework for evaluating the ethical acceptabilit...
This document is an extended version of the one published in the proceedings of RoboPhilosophy confe...
The analysis presented is focused on the interaction among social robots and humans. It is here stat...
This paper contributes to the debate in the ethics of social robots on how or whether to treat socia...
In this paper, the author proposes a theoretical framework for drawing a line between acceptable and...
In this paper, the author proposes a theoretical framework for drawing a line between acceptable and...
In this paper, the author proposes a theoretical framework for drawing a line between acceptable and...
In this paper, the author proposes a theoretical framework for drawing a line between acceptable and...
In this paper, the author proposes a theoretical framework for drawing a line between acceptable and...
In this paper, the author proposes a theoretical framework for drawing a line between acceptable and...
When people interact with socially interactive robots on a regular basis, it could be that people st...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Currently, human-robot interactions are constructed according to the rules of human-human interactio...
Currently, human-robot interactions are constructed according to the rules of human-human interactio...
How must we understand joint action between humans and robots? Responding to Knoblich &\ud Sebanz (2...
In this chapter, the author proposes a theoretical framework for evaluating the ethical acceptabilit...
This document is an extended version of the one published in the proceedings of RoboPhilosophy confe...