default search action
AI & Society, Volume 31
Volume 31, Number 1, February 2016
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Transformative engagement. 1-3 - Kevin Warwick, Huma Shah:
Effects of lying in practical Turing tests. 5-15 - Nicola Liberati:
Augmented reality and ubiquitous computing: the hidden potentialities of augmented reality. 17-28 - Joseph Lee:
Brain-computer interfaces and dualism: a problem of brain, mind, and body. 29-40 - Tom Flint, Phil Turner:
Enactive appropriation. 41-49 - Nicola J. Bidwell:
Moving the centre to design social media in rural Africa. 51-77 - V. Hari Narayanan:
Revisiting the self: a sine qua non for understanding embodiment. 79-84 - Yasushi Fukuhara:
A critical interpretation of bottom-up management and leadership styles within Japanese companies: a focus on empowerment and trust. 85-93 - Tobias Matzner:
The model gap: cognitive systems in security applications and their ethical implications. 95-102 - Oliver Bendel:
Considerations about the relationship between animal and machine ethics. 103-108 - Rolando Medellin-Gasque, Chris Reed, Vicki L. Hanson:
Recommendations to support interaction with broadcast debates: a study on older adults' interaction with The Moral Maze. 109-120 - Marilena Kyriakidou:
Discussing robot crime interviewers for children's forensic testimonies: a relatively new field for investigation. 121-126 - Richard Ennals:
Beyond the age of innocence. 127-128 - Richard Ennals:
Ideas, context and action. 129-130 - Richard Ennals:
Histories and futures. 131-132
Volume 31, Number 2, May 2016
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Artificial super intelligence: beyond rhetoric. 137-143 - Karamjit S. Gill:
Erratum to: Artificial super intelligence: beyond rhetoric. 145 - Phil Turner:
Presence: Is it just pretending? 147-156 - Porfírio Silva:
Human, machines, and the interpretation of formal systems. 157-169 - Jeffrey Benjamin White:
Simulation, self-extinction, and philosophy in the service of human civilization. 171-190 - Marilena Kyriakidou:
Auto-Catastrophic Theory: the necessity of self-destruction for the formation, survival, and termination of systems. 191-200 - Stuart Armstrong, Nick Bostrom, Carl Shulman:
Racing to the precipice: a model of artificial intelligence development. 201-206 - Kevin Warwick, Huma Shah:
The importance of a human viewpoint on computer natural language capabilities: a Turing test perspective. 207-221 - Jesper Aagaard:
Mobile devices, interaction, and distraction: a qualitative exploration of absent presence. 223-231 - Arun Kumar Tripathi:
Culture of sedimentation in the human-technology interaction. 233-242 - Arun Kumar Tripathi:
Erratum to: Culture of sedimentation in the human-technology interaction. 243-244 - Pedro Ponce, Kenneth Polasko, Arturo Molina:
Technology transfer motivation analysis based on fuzzy type 2 signal detection theory. 245-257 - Abdelwahab Naji, Mohamed Ramdani:
Toward a better self-regulation: degree of certainty through fuzzy logic in a formative assessment. 259-264 - Harsh Bhasin, Sushant Mehta:
On the applicability of diploid genetic algorithms. 265-274 - Sang-Chul Park:
Growth strategy for Finnish science parks under external economic crises. 275-286 - Nasim Ashrafi, Mohammad Naghizadeh:
Clarifying the interaction between ideas and architectural works in the Achaemenid era. 287-296 - Richard Ennals:
Thirty years on. 297-298 - Gokul Somasekharan:
Bernhard Irrgang: Critics of technological lifeworld, collection of philosophical essays - Arun Kumar Tripathi (ed.): Series: Dresden philosophy of technology studies/Dresdner Studien zur Philosophie der Technologie - Volume 4, Peter Lang Verlag, Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2011, 152 pp. ISBN 978-3-631-58570-2. 299-300
Volume 31, Number 3, August 2016
- Larry Stapleton:
International systems stability, culture and advanced technology. 301-303 - Peter P. Groumpos:
Overview of the triangle of knowledge: a driving force for sustainable growth in less developed nations. 305-318 - Alan Cottey:
Openness and stability. 319-325 - Marion A. Hersh:
Engineers and the other: the role of narrative ethics. 327-345 - John Organ, Larry Stapleton:
Technologist engagement with risk management practices during systems development? Approaches, effectiveness and challenges. 347-359 - Norbert Jesse:
Communities: with open-source software towards a vivacious civil society. 361-370 - Natalya A. Karnaukhova, Ekaterina V. Polyanskaya:
Communication and reputation as essentials for the positioning of an organization. 371-379 - Irina P. Kuzheleva-Sagan, Natalya A. Suchkova:
Designing trust in the Internet services. 381-392 - Mihaela Mecea:
Training in intercultural mediation in a multicultural university: contributions for fostering international stability. 393-399 - Amy Stapleton, Mihaela Mecea, Lulzim Beqiri:
The European Union's contributions to international stability: the role of education and study mobilities. 401-412 - Natalia Kobza, Torben Schaefer, Robert Glawar, Dietrich Brandt:
How can we learn leadership? The vision of the Europe-wide University. 413-429 - Richard Ennals:
Artificial stupidity. 431-432
Volume 31, Number 4, November 2016
- Karamjit S. Gill:
Architect or Bee? Mike Cooley: the human spirit. 435-437 - Karamjit S. Gill:
Erratum to: Architect or Bee? Mike Cooley: the human spirit. 439
- Gesa Lindemann, Hironori Matsuzaki, Ilona Straub:
Special issue on: Going beyond the laboratory - reconsidering the ELS implications of autonomous robots. 441-444 - Robert Sparrow:
Robots in aged care: a dystopian future? 445-454 - Mark Coeckelbergh:
Care robots and the future of ICT-mediated elderly care: a response to doom scenarios. 455-462 - Guglielmo Tamburrini:
On the ethical framing of research programs in robotics. 463-471 - Susanne Beck:
The problem of ascribing legal responsibility in the case of robotics. 473-481 - Tomoko Nambu:
Legal regulations and public policies for next-generation robots in Japan. 483-500 - Hironori Matsuzaki, Gesa Lindemann:
The autonomy-safety-paradox of service robotics in Europe and Japan: a comparative analysis. 501-517 - Morana Alac:
Social robots: Things or agents? 519-535 - Selma Sabanovic, Wan Ling Chang:
Socializing robots: constructing robotic sociality in the design and use of the assistive robot PARO. 537-551 - Ilona Straub:
'It looks like a human!' The interrelation of social presence, interaction and agency ascription: a case study about the effects of an android robot on social agency ascription. 553-571 - Gesa Lindemann:
Social interaction with robots: three questions. 573-575 - Atsuo Takanishi:
From an engineers point of view: response to "Social interaction with robots - three questions". In Gesa Lindemann (this volume). 577-580 - Martin Meister, Ingo Schulz-Schaeffer:
Investigating and designing social robots from a role-theoretical perspective: Response to "Social interaction with robots - three questions". In Gesa Lindemann (this volume). 581-585 - Karola Pitsch:
Limits and opportunities for mathematizing communicational conduct for social robotics in the real world? Toward enabling a robot to make use of the human's competences - Response to the Question 2: : "Are there limits to mathematization?". In Gesa Lindemann, (this volume), Social interaction with robots - three questions. 587-593
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.