Title: Ethics in Human Robot Interaction (HRI)
1Ethics in Human Robot Interaction(HRI)
2Ethics in Human Robot Interaction(HRI)
- Evolution of robots (then)
- What can robots do?
- How do they fit into our
lives? - What are the possibilities?
- Dangers?
3Ethics in Human Robot Interaction (HRI)
- Asimov's laws (1942)
- (1) A robot may not injure a human being or,
through inaction, allow
a human being to come to harm. - (2) A robot must obey any orders given to it by
human beings, except
where such orders would conflict with the First
Law. - (3) A robot must protect its own existence as
long as such
protection does not conflict with the First or
Second Law. - (Wikipedia http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T
hree_Laws_of_Robotics) - 0th law (added later) A robot may not harm
humanity, or, by inaction, allow humanity to come
to harm.
4Ethics in Human Robot Interaction(HRI)
- Impact of the robot evolution on roboethics
- What should we consider?
5Ethics in Human Robot Interaction(HRI)
- Roboethics is a young field even less has been
studied about roboethics applied to HRI - Good robotics
- What does this mean?
- What are the implications of more able robots?
- Necessary paradigm shift
- From Design from the engineer's perspective
- To Design from the perspective of the end user
- What does this require?
6Ethics in Human Robot Interaction(HRI)
- Facts
- In 2006, there were 77 reported robot-related
accidents in England alone, according to the
Health and Safety Executive. (Robots AI Methods
in Robotics) - In 2007 a military robot used in the South
African army killed nine soldiers after a
malfunction - According to the United Nations Economic
Commission for Europe's World Robotics Survey, in
2002 the number of domestic and service robots
more than tripled, nearly outstripping their
industrial counterparts. ... - If a robot is autonomous and capable of learning,
can its owner/designer be held responsible for
all its actions?
7Ethics in Human Robot Interaction(HRI)
- A few basic questions to consider
- If someone is harmed by a robot or because of a
robot's actions, who's to blame? - If robot is a tool, could we
blame the saw manufacturer if
somone gets cut? - If someone is harmed because they use the robot
for a purpose other than that intended, who is to
blame? - If the robot experiences catastrophic failure,
and someone is harmed by the robot's inaction,
who's to blame?
8Ethics in Human Robot Interaction(HRI)
- These are diffcult questions to answer
definitively, but what about unpredictable
behavior? - Emergent behavior is the sometimes unexpected
behavior that results from interactions between
the robots control system and the real world - Not uncommon!
- How accountable is the designer for emergent
robot behavior?
9Ethics in Human Robot Interaction(HRI)
- Open texture risk
- Risk occurring from unpredictable interactions in
unstructured environments. - Example getting robots to understand the
nuances of natural (human) language. - Ambiguity resulting from interpretation that
varies due to outside factors. - Asimovs Three Laws do not specifically address
these risks! - Ethics are embedded into robots
- Through code designed to resolve issues
10Ethics in Human Robot Interaction(HRI)
- Executing complex tasks in unstructured and
dynamic worlds is an immensely challenging
problem - The most efficient form is the humanoid robot
form since the real world environment is designed
to serve dual-armed bipeds (stairs, railings,
etc...) - However, merely giving a robot the human shape
does not make it friendly to humans. - Present day humanoid robots instead of
stepping over a person lying on the ground
would most probably walk on the person
without falling over - What expectations does a humanoid inspire?
11Ethics in Human Robot Interaction(HRI)
- Key areas for emerging roboethics include
- Ensuring human control of robots
- Preventing illegal use
- Protecting data acquired by robots
- Establishing clear identification and
traceability of the machines
12Ethics in Human Robot Interaction(HRI)
- Case study Hospital delivery robot
- What kinds of services could this robot provide?
- Provide directions to specific hospital locations
- Provide efficient delivery of meds, charts, food
- Consult with patients' families regarding
diagnosis, prognosis and treatment - Self care (charge battery, etc)
- Stay out of the way!
- What kinds of services should the robot provide?
- How should the robot accomplish these tasks?
13Ethics in Human Robot Interaction(HRI)
- Ethical issues for robots used in health care
(carebots) - If the development and use of carebots is driven
by management motivations will this be the only
motivationand expected benefit? - Are carebots also meant to improve the care
itself? - Will they actually improve care?
- Will they enhance the quality of the lives of the
patients? - Will they enhance values such as autonomy?
- Is it ethically desirable or allowed to replace
human-human interaction with human-robot
interaction in this context? - What is genuine social interaction?
- The use of robots may allow more frequent contact
with patients, but what is the value of that kind
of contact desirable? And how can we evaluate
this? - Will carebots enhance the quality of life of
patients, given that human-human interaction will
be substituted for human-robot interaction?
14Ethics in Human Robot Interaction(HRI)
- A few last thoughts
- Robot use is becoming increasingly pervasive in
society - Assist ill and elderly people by monitoring them
- Assist developmentally disabled adults and
children - Helping stroke patients with rehabilitation
- Deliver drugs, food, mail in hospitals
- Robots in the home assist with domestic tasks
- How can we prepare?
- Design, develop and test realistic scenarios and
evaluate these scenarios as we focus on the
ethical aspects of HRI - Design, develop and implement contingencies to
handle potentially harmful robot behavior