TY - BOOK AU - Baron,Naomi S. AU - Collins,Sawyer AU - Craig,Matthew AU - Dahlgren,Kari AU - Damiano,Luisa AU - Danese,Elda AU - Dehnert,Marco AU - Devlin,Kate AU - Di Battista,Silvia AU - Dumouchel,Paul AU - Dunbar,Norah E. AU - Duque,Melisa AU - Edwards,Autumn AU - Edwards,Chad AU - Eyssel,Friederike AU - Fang,Chengyu AU - Fortunati,Leopoldina AU - Fosch-Villaronga,Eduard AU - Gehl,Robert W. AU - Gunkel,David J. AU - Guzman,Andrea L. AU - Jin,Xianlin AU - Lawson,Sean AU - Ling,Richard AU - Lombard,Matthew AU - Lutz,Christoph AU - Macko,Thomas M. AU - Marchesi,Serena AU - Nah,Seungahn AU - Natale,Simone AU - Perugia,Giulia AU - Peter,Jochen AU - Phan,Thao AU - Pivetti,Monica AU - Sarrica,Mauro AU - Selverian,Melissa E. AU - Severson,Rachel L. AU - Spence,Patric R. AU - Srinivasan,Divya AU - Straten,Caroline L.van AU - Strengers,Yolande AU - Sweezy,Sarah E. AU - Tamò-Larrieux,Aurelia AU - Thimm,Caja AU - Thimm-Braun,Laura AU - Weiss,Astrid AU - Wilkenfeld,J.Nan AU - Wykowska,Agnieszka AU - Xu,Kun AU - Šabanović,Selma Š TI - The De Gruyter Handbook of Robots in Society and Culture T2 - De Gruyter Handbooks of Digital Transformation , SN - 9783110792157 U1 - 303.483 PY - 2024///] CY - Berlin, Boston PB - De Gruyter KW - SOCIAL SCIENCE / Technology Studies KW - bisacsh KW - Artificial Agents KW - Digital Sociology KW - Robotic Cultures KW - Robotic Technologies KW - Robots N1 - Frontmatter --; Contents --; Introduction --; Section 1: Robots in Culture and Society --; Future Presence: Living with Social Robots --; Representing Robots in Popular Culture --; Designing Robots That are Accepted in Human Social Environments: Anthropomorphism, the Intentional Stance, Cultural Norms and Values, and Societal Implications --; Are Robotic Bodies (Part of) Social Bodies? --; Persons or Things: The Role of Robots in Society --; Automated Masspersonal Social Engineering --; Section 2: Humanistic and Social Scientific Perspectives --; Linguistics --; AI and Human Writing: Collaboration or Appropriation? --; Law --; Policies, Regulation, and Legal Perspectives on Social Robots --; How Social Robots Affect Privacy: Navigating the Landscape --; Sociology --; Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, and the Evolution of the Social Sciences --; Human Interactions With (Embodied) AI: The Future of Authenticity in Human–AI Relation(ship)s --; Psychology and Neuroscience --; Mind Perception During and After Interacting with Artificial Agents --; How People Perceive Social Robots: The Case of Gender --; Relating with Social Robots: Issues of Sex, Love, Intimacy, Emotion, Attachment, and Companionship --; Real or Pretend? How Children Ontologize Social Robots as Mental and Moral Others --; Communication and Computer Sciences --; Rethinking Communication between Humans and Social Robots --; Interacting with Social Robots: The Influence of their Distinctive Cues, Behavioral Capabilities, and Affordances on Social Interaction and Well-being --; Integrating Big-Data Tools to Study AI and Human–Machine Communication: Methodology Strengths, Future Directions, and Applications --; Social Robots and Children: A Field in Development --; Section 3: Contexts of Human–Robot Interaction --; Anthropomorphizing Voice Assistants: A Research Agenda for Human–AI Relationships --; Domestic Appliances and Household Robots: The Changing Landscape of Housework and Family --; Ability and Disability: Social Robots and Accessibility, Disability Justice, and the Socially Constructed Normal Body --; Growing Old Together: The Promise and Challenge of Social Robots for Older Adults --; Power and Synchrony in Human Collaboration with Exoskeletons --; Index; restricted access; Issued also in print N2 - The De Gruyter Handbook of Robots in Society and Culture provides a comprehensive discussion of how social robots take form, function, and meaning for individuals, relationships, cultures, and societies. Through a path-breaking integration of perspectives coming from sociology, communication and media, psychology, cognitive neuroscience, anthropology, political science, and science and technology studies, it focuses on the critical and social meaning of present developments in social robotic technologies. This book looks at artificial agents – from voice-based assistants to humanoid robots— as their use transforms private and public contexts and gives rise to both new possibilities and new perils for human being and becoming, organizations as well as social structures and institutions. The handbook traces the consequences and key problems of social robotics across broad social contexts in both public and political as well as domestic and intimate spaces. Further, it attends carefully to the implications of social robotics for various human identity groups, including those based on gender, ethnicity, culture, class, ability, and age. Deep attention to interdisciplinarity, inclusivity, ethics, and socio-cultural futures serves as the guiding inspiration behind each contribution within this handbook UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110792270 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9783110792270 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9783110792270/original ER -