Difference between revisions of "Pelikan2022"
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|Author(s)=Hannah R. M. Pelikan; Mathias Broth; Leelo Keevallik; | |Author(s)=Hannah R. M. Pelikan; Mathias Broth; Leelo Keevallik; | ||
|Title=When a Robot Comes to Life: The Interactional Achievement of Agency as a Transient Phenomenon | |Title=When a Robot Comes to Life: The Interactional Achievement of Agency as a Transient Phenomenon | ||
− | |Tag(s)=EMCA; Human-robot interaction; Social robotics; Agency; Participation; Sequence organization; Autonomy | + | |Tag(s)=EMCA; Human-robot interaction; Social robotics; Agency; Participation; Sequence organization; Autonomy; Artificial intelligence; AI; AI Reference List |
|Key=Pelikan2022 | |Key=Pelikan2022 | ||
|Year=2022 | |Year=2022 |
Latest revision as of 00:13, 22 October 2022
Pelikan2022 | |
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BibType | ARTICLE |
Key | Pelikan2022 |
Author(s) | Hannah R. M. Pelikan, Mathias Broth, Leelo Keevallik |
Title | When a Robot Comes to Life: The Interactional Achievement of Agency as a Transient Phenomenon |
Editor(s) | |
Tag(s) | EMCA, Human-robot interaction, Social robotics, Agency, Participation, Sequence organization, Autonomy, Artificial intelligence, AI, AI Reference List |
Publisher | |
Year | 2022 |
Language | English |
City | |
Month | |
Journal | Social Interaction: Video-Based Studies of Human Sociality |
Volume | 5 |
Number | 3 |
Pages | |
URL | Link |
DOI | 10.7146/si.v5i3.129915 |
ISBN | |
Organization | |
Institution | |
School | |
Type | |
Edition | |
Series | |
Howpublished | |
Book title | |
Chapter |
Abstract
Conceptualizing agency is a long-standing theoretical concern. Taking an ethnomethodological and conversation analytic perspective, we explore agency as the oriented to capacity to produce situationally and sequentially relevant action. Drawing on video recordings of families interacting with the Cozmo toy robot, we present a multimodal analysis of a single episode featuring a variety of rapidly interchanging forms of robotic (non-)agency. We demonstrate how agency is ongoingly constituted in situated interaction between humans and a robot. Describing different ways in which the robot’s statuses as either an agent or an object are interactionally embodied into being, we distinguish “autonomous” agency, hybrid agency, ascribed agency, potential agency and non-agency.
Notes