default search action
Journal of Human-Robot Interaction, Volume 5
Volume 5, Number 1, March 2016
- Daniel S. Brown, Michael A. Goodrich, Shin-Young Jung, Sean Kerman:
Two invariants of human-swarm interaction. 1-31 - Alexandre Coninx, Paul Baxter, Elettra Oleari, Sara Bellini, Bert P. B. Bierman, Olivier A. Blanson Henkemans, Lola Cañamero, Piero Cosi, Valentin Enescu, Raquel Ros Espinoza, Antoine Hiolle, Rémi Humbert, Bernd Kiefer, Ivana Kruijff-Korbayová, Rosemarijn Looije, Marco Mosconi, Mark A. Neerincx, Giulio Paci, Georgios Patsis, Clara Pozzi, Francesca Sacchitelli, Hichem Sahli, Alberto Sanna, Giacomo Sommavilla, Fabio Tesser, Yiannis Demiris, Tony Belpaeme:
Towards long-term social child-robot interaction: using multi-activity switching to engage young users. 32-67 - Goh Matsuda, Kazuo Hiraki, Hiroshi Ishiguro:
EEG-Based mu rhythm suppression to measure the effects of appearance and motion on perceived human likeness of a robot. 68-81 - Denise Y. Geiskkovitch, Derek Cormier, Stela Hanbyeol Seo, James E. Young:
Please continue, we need more data: an exploration of obedience to robots. 82-99 - Elizabeth Phillips, Kristin E. Schaefer, Deborah R. Billings, Florian Jentsch, Peter A. Hancock:
Human-animal teams as an analog for future human-robot teams: influencing design and fostering trust. 100-125
Volume 5, Number 2, September 2016
- Tian Zhou, Maria E. Cabrera, Juan P. Wachs, Thomas Low, Chandru Sundaram:
A comparative study for telerobotic surgery using free hand gestures. 1-28 - Kumar Yogeeswaran, Jakub Zlotowski, Megan Livingstone, Christoph Bartneck, Hidenobu Sumioka, Hiroshi Ishiguro:
The interactive effects of robot anthropomorphism and robot ability on perceived threat and support for robotics research. 29-47 - Ross Mead, Maja J. Mataric:
Robots have needs too: how and why people adapt their proxemic behavior to improve robot social signal understanding. 48-68 - Rik van den Brule, Gijsbert Bijlstra, Ron Dotsch, Pim Haselager, Daniël H. J. Wigboldus:
Warning signals for poor performance improve human-robot interaction. 69-89
Volume 5, Number 3, December 2016
- Kate Darling, Ryan Calo:
Introduction to journal of human-robot interaction special issue on law and policy. 1-2 - Christopher Brett Jaeger, Daniel T. Levin:
If asimo thinks, does roomba feel?: the legal implications of attributing agency to technology. 3-25 - Richmond Y. Wong, Deirdre K. Mulligan:
These aren't the autonomous drones you're looking for: investigating privacy concerns through concept videos. 26-54 - Peter Asaro:
"Hands up, don't shoot!": HRI and the automation of police use of force. 55-69 - Woodrow Hartzog:
Et tu, Android?: regulating dangerous and dishonest robots. 70-81
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.