[meetings][CFP][RO-MAN 2024] Extended deadline for Trust, Acceptance and Social Cues in Human-Robot Interaction Workshop
Dear colleagues,
We would like to inform you that we extended the deadline for submission at SCRITA workshop.
This workshop focuses on the continuous investigation of unresolved and new open challenges of the factors affecting people's acceptance and trust in robots in short- and long-term settings.
We will invite authors to submit 2-page position papers only, discussing their prior experience and new developments in the scope of the workshop to feed into the group and the following panel discussions. All accepted papers will have short oral presentations.
Please find below the full CFP, but do not hesitate to contact us for further information.
best regards
Alessandra
SCRITA 2024
Trust, Acceptance and Social Cues in Human-Robot Interaction
Pasadena Convention Center in Pasadena, California, USA
26-30 August 2024
Workshop website
Submission link
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=scrita2024
Submission deadline
14 July 2024
This workshop will be a half day event on 26 August and it is organised in conjunction with the IEEE RO-MAN 2024 http://ro-man2024.org/ conference, held in Pasadena, California, USA.
This workshop focuses on the continuous investigation of unresolved and new open challenges of the factors affecting people's acceptance and trust in robots in short- and long-term settings. In particular, we want to look into the dynamics between people and robots to foster short interactions and long-lasting relationships taking inspiration from different domains, such as educational, service, collaborative, companion, care-home and medical robotics. For that, this workshop aims to facilitate a discussion about people’s trust towards robots “in the field”, inviting workshop participants to contribute their past experiences, lessons learnt and future issues.
During last year's workshop edition (i.e., SCRITA@RO-MAN 2023), together with leading researchers and exceptional speakers from various fields, we started working towards developing such novel methods. We outlined current methods and their strengths, discussing how these measures do not always reflect appropriately, or how some questions might be ambiguous and leave room for interpretation by individual participants. We identified five main factors affecting trust to be investigated to generate a new metric that allows researchers to assess and reduce common side effects influencing how people put their trust in robots. Submission & List of Topics
The workshop will be open to a broad audience from academia and industry researching social robotics, machine learning, robot behavioural control, and user profiling. In particular, we aim to integrate expertise from roboticists with psychologists' and sociologists’ insights and experiences to foster a multidisciplinary and human-focused discussion that can capture the multi-faceted nature of trust and acceptance. We will foster the exchange of views on past and ongoing research and contribute to the discussion of innovative ideas for tackling unresolved issues by providing new and inspirational directions for research.
We will invite authors to submit 2-pages position papers only, discussing their prior experience and new developments in the scope of the workshop to feed into the group and the following panel discussions.
We further encourage authors of the accepted papers to present a video or demonstrate their works and achievements.
All accepted submissions will have an oral presentation.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
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Impact of Social Cues on Trust in HRI; -
Measuring Trust in HRI; -
Trust Violation and Recovery Mechanism in HRI; -
Effects of Humans’ Acceptance on Trust of Robots; -
Humans Sense of Control and Trust in Robots; -
Trust and Assistive Robotics; -
Overtrust in Robots; -
Antecedent of Trust and Robot Trust; -
Enhancing Humans Trust in Robots; -
Enhancing Trust in a Robot Companion; -
Privacy Implications on Trust in HRI; -
Mental Models and Trust in HRI; -
Trust and Safety in HRI; -
Ethics Implications on Trust in HRI; -
Trustworthy AI; -
XAI in HRI; -
Legal Frameworks for Trustworthy Robotics
Submission Guidelines
Authors should submit their papers formatted according to the IEEE two-column format http://ras.papercept.net/conferences/support/support.php, which is also used for contributions to the main conference. Use the following templates to create the paper and generate or export a PDF file: LaTeX http://ras.papercept.net/conferences/support/tex.php or MS-Word http://ras.papercept.net/conferences/support/word.php.
Authors needs to submit their PDF via EasyChair https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=scrita2024. Invited Speakers We confirm the participation of Prof. Selma Šabanović. Committees
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Dr Alessandra Rossi, Department of Electrical Engineering and Information Technology, University of Naples Federico II (Italy) -
Dr Patrick Holthaus, School of Physics, Engineering and Computer Science, University of Hertfordshire (UK) -
Sílvia Moros, School of Physics, Engineering and Computer Science, University of Hertfordshire (UK) -
Dr Gabriella Lakatos, School of Physics, Engineering and Computer Science, University of Hertfordshire (UK) -
Ali Fallahi, School of Physics, Engineering and Computer Science, University of Hertfordshire (UK)
Contact
All questions about submissions should be emailed to a*****i@herts.ac.uk - p********s@herts.ac.uk
participants (1)
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Alessandra Rossi