Learning Futures with Mixed Sentience

Title: Learning Futures with Mixed Sentience
Format: Journal Article
Publication Date: March 2017
Published In: Futures
Publisher Elsevier
Description:
  • People with disabilities have benefited from the use of assistive technologies that compensate for, or augment functioning.
  • Socially assistive robots (SAR) both assist with functioning, and engage users socially, often as service, co- robots and companions.
  • Trends in networked learning communities suggest that membership and rules of exchange will define function, engagement and experiences.
  • Future communities will likely be characterized by high degrees of interdependence within and varying degrees of openness to outside exchanges.
  • The ethics of human-robot exchanges within mixed learning communities are undergirded by respect for the interdependence of robots and humans.
External Contributors: Bricout, J., Sharma, B., Baker, P.M.A., Behal, A., & Boloni, L.
Citation:

Bricout, J., Sharma, B., Baker, P.M.A., Behal, A., & Boloni, L. (2017). Learning Futures with Mixed Sentience. Futures, 87, (March), 91-105.  http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.futures.2016.10.001   

Related Links:
Related Departments:
  • Center for Advanced Communications Policy