00:35:17 Andrew Kun: Questions for the panel? Please type them here. 00:41:54 Shamsi Iqbal: What are some of the advantages in interactions that you see the robots can have over, say voice assistants? Do you think people would treat them more human-like because there is a physical embodiment? 00:41:55 Andrew Kun: Which of our expectations are likely to be misguided? In “I, robot” the robot can play hide-and-seek, but can’t produce speech, presumably because Asimov felt that speech is just too hard. What might be a similar misconception today? 00:42:38 Diana Tosca: I notice that when my Amazon Alexa gets annoying, I start trying to yell at it, like “shut up,” instead of telling it to stop the notification. I was wondering how much the disembodied voice portion of it impacts our empathy with robots? Do we NEED to have that humanoid interface (or maybe not humanoid, because of the uncanny valley) to experience the empathy? 00:42:57 Diana Tosca: How valuable is this empathy with robots? 00:44:30 Nadia Fereydooni: Going off of Diana’s question, would lack of empathy with robots influence our empathy with other people? does how we work with robots train us for our behavior in the society? 00:46:21 Chris Janssen: diana: has your question also been addressed sufficiently? Or would you like to add to it? 00:46:22 Diana Tosca: @Nadia, would that mean that we value robots in the same way we value humans? 00:46:24 Charity Reed: On the flip side of Nadia's question, and jumping off of Shamsi's statement will the lack of any negative feedback to being for instance rude to the robot, spill over to interactions with humans if we get too used to being able to react in any manner to these robots? 00:46:36 Diana Tosca: I’m good! thanks Chris 00:48:51 Ariel Traver: What is an example of a situation where a robot broke a social norm, prompting a person to bully or abuse it? 00:50:06 Andrew Kun: How can we use art to help us look into the future of human-robot interaction? Books, movies, art installations… 00:50:23 Diana Tosca: Another questions I was having: what are your thoughts on using robots to do our labor? 00:50:26 Diana Tosca: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09528130601116139 00:50:48 Diana Tosca: ^ this abstract summarizes the ethical implications 00:51:03 Orit Shaer: In the near future we’ll see robots integrated to many work environments ranging from manufacturing to health care. In many scenarios humans will be working with robots rather than replaced by robots. What should we change in the training of workers to facilitate effective cooperation between humans and robots? 00:51:06 Diana Tosca: “Could it be ethical use them as unpaid labor? There is very little philosophical literature on this topic, but the consensus so far has been that such robot servitude would merely be a new form of slavery.” 00:53:50 Shadan Sadeghian: @Orit, inline with your question, how can we make this collaboration that the humans still feel competent, not fully “replaced” and have a meaningful experience at work in collaboration with robots? 00:55:37 Divya Bharathi: Should we also worry about security issues with robots? like Hacking by someone and change robot features.. 00:56:31 Diana Tosca: ^^^!!!! 00:58:50 Renate van der Bent: Security issues are important, but shouldn't we be more worried about privacy issues? What happens with all the data collected by robots? 01:01:03 Orit Shaer: What are some global issues that you foresee robots helping us to make significant progress on?