[emcai] EMCA/AI network - Reminder meeting today

Stuart Reeves Stuart.Reeves at nottingham.ac.uk
Fri Sep 27 04:09:28 MDT 2024


Sending apologies to all - would very much like to be there but have other duties today :(

Thanks to you all as a team for keeping this network going!


> On 27 Sep 2024, at 09:00, Rijk, L.E.M. de (Lynn) via emcai <emcai at conversationanalysis.org> wrote:
>
> Dear EMCA/AI network members,
>  Hereby a reminder that we have our first session after summer break today, from 12.30-14.00 CET at: https://liu-se.zoom.us/j/62999036262
> For new members to the list, you can find the dates for upcoming events here (more details will be added and will also follow by mail): https://emcai.conversationanalysis.org/events/
>  We hope to see many of you this afternoon! And again many thanks to Damien for preparing all of this (see details of this session below).
>  Best wishes,
> Lynn, Hannah and Saul
>   Session details - 27 September
> The last EMCAI session outlined several interesting “assumptions” on what constitutes “interaction” in “human-robot interaction” or “human-VUI interaction”. Because the discussion was still lively when time ran out, we invite you to join us for one final session on the very same topic: What do “we” (EMCA researchers, non-EMCA-oriented HRI researchers, engineers, designers, tech companies' employees, etc.) respectively index when we formulate phrases such as “conversing with a robot”, “interacting with a vocal agent”, etc.?
>  Outlined below is a tentative list of the prominent assumptions debated last time. Some of those assumptions may prevail in “the industry” (i.e., in private companies working on commercial robots or VUIs), while others may be at the core of different disciplines in HRI/HCI academic research. Some might be documented across multiple papers and fields, while others might still remain unexplored.
>     • Human-robot interaction as "information transfer" rather than "dealing with practical problems in situated activities".
>     • Human-robot interaction as questions and answers – a focus on turns' “composition” over turns' “position”.
>     • Human-robot interaction as non-contingent, definite, and exhaustively describable – the definiteness of reality and the possibility of its description rather than the "essential vagueness" of social life.
>     • Human-robot Conversation as a practical achievement that it is pointless to reconstruct analytically (e.g., using CA) to, then, extract a set of granular guidelines or rules – conversational design as "gut feeling”.
>     • Human-robot interaction as interactions with machines and not interactions that involve machines – “human-machine coupling” rather than "interaction" in a situated and holistic sense.
> 1) For the next session: To expand, correct, or refine this brief preliminary list, we invite you to prepare any data that you would like to discuss (articles, videos, documents, etc.) and that may exemplify a common assumption about “human-robot interaction” or “human-VUI interaction”. Our intention is not to have a debate on “interaction” as a concept, but to investigate what is indexed by different HRI actors as an “interaction”, and to explore if these assumptions impact the design of robots or VUIs – as well as the tools used to design or program them. For example, do these assumptions find their way into the most recent conversational technologies, such as chatbots based on large language models like chatGPT? And if so, what evidence can substantiate these claims? We would love to discuss any data you might want to present, even tangentially related to these topics.
>  2) As a starting point, the candidate assumptions discussed during our previous session have been tentatively mapped onto a Miro board. This Miro board lays out assumptions that were hypothesized to be prevailing in HRI, as well as alternative positions that contrasted with those prevailing assumptions:
> - https://miro.com/app/board/uXjVK73KAOQ=/?share_link_id=886506295959
> -Password: assumptions
> We will try to use this board as a basis for our discussions next time. In the meanwhile, we invite you to modify this collaborative Miro board as you see fit. Feel free to add, modify, or move assumptions, contrasting assumptions, comments, criticism, questions, empirical data, or to draw new clusters around the preexisting sticky notes. Similarly, do not hesitate to heavily update the Miro board if you think about better organizing principles or if you have more catchy names for existing assumptions. (For those who participated in our last session, sorry in advance if we miscategorized your verbatims!)
>   --
> emcai mailing list
> emcai at conversationanalysis.org
> http://conversationanalysis.org/mailman/listinfo/emcai_conversationanalysis.org


Stuart Reeves | Mixed Reality Lab, School of Computer Science (C15), University of Nottingham
http://www.cs.nott.ac.uk/~str

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