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Anthropomorphic Machines : Implications of Human-Robot Social Interactions for Law and Society

Öztürk, Anil LU orcid (2020) International Scientific Conference: “Transformative Technologies: Legal and Ethical Challenges of the 21st Century” p.493-510
Abstract
Human-robot interactions are inherently different from interactions with other artefacts, as robots are autonomous. Furthermore, recent technological advances have also enabled robots to undertake roles that are formerly thought to be reserved for humans, e.g. as companions or lovers, since interactive abilities of robots and their autonomy are sufficient to evoke an automatic cognitive response - robot anthropomorphism. Robot anthropomorphism, the attribution of human attitudes and emotions to robots, implies that behaviours towards robots may have implications for individuals and society in the long term. Examples include manipulation of emotional attachments to robots and increase in existing privacy risks. To respond to these... (More)
Human-robot interactions are inherently different from interactions with other artefacts, as robots are autonomous. Furthermore, recent technological advances have also enabled robots to undertake roles that are formerly thought to be reserved for humans, e.g. as companions or lovers, since interactive abilities of robots and their autonomy are sufficient to evoke an automatic cognitive response - robot anthropomorphism. Robot anthropomorphism, the attribution of human attitudes and emotions to robots, implies that behaviours towards robots may have implications for individuals and society in the long term. Examples include manipulation of emotional attachments to robots and increase in existing privacy risks. To respond to these implications, legal orders must acknowledge that robots are no longer mere tools of human interactions, but instead parties to such interactions. This paper, examines the unique implications on law and society presented by sociable robots, anthropomorphic machines by design. First, the phenomenon of robot anthropomorphism and its effects, and then, the risks presented by the sociable robots are addressed. As such, this chapter lays out the foundation for the examination of both the legal problems arising from the autonomy of robots, and the recommendations regarding the solution of these problems. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
AI law, Robot law, Privacy risks in robotics, Regulation of social robots, Law and emerging technologies, Jurisprudence, AI-rätt, Rättsvetenskap
host publication
Transformative Technologies : Legal and Ethical Challenges of the 21st Century - Legal and Ethical Challenges of the 21st Century
editor
Mirjanić, Željko and Milinković, Igor
pages
18 pages
publisher
Faculty of Law, University of Banja Luka
conference name
International Scientific Conference: “Transformative Technologies: Legal and Ethical Challenges of the 21st Century”
conference location
Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina
conference dates
2020-02-07 - 2020-02-08
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
00c59460-c98c-4e2c-bb99-c4d026b2d4aa
alternative location
https://www.ceeol.com/search/article-detail?id=1132141
date added to LUP
2025-08-13 14:48:42
date last changed
2025-08-25 09:23:51
@inproceedings{00c59460-c98c-4e2c-bb99-c4d026b2d4aa,
  abstract     = {{Human-robot interactions are inherently different from interactions with other artefacts, as robots are autonomous. Furthermore, recent technological advances have also enabled robots to undertake roles that are formerly thought to be reserved for humans, e.g. as companions or lovers, since interactive abilities of robots and their autonomy are sufficient to evoke an automatic cognitive response - robot anthropomorphism. Robot anthropomorphism, the attribution of human attitudes and emotions to robots, implies that behaviours towards robots may have implications for individuals and society in the long term. Examples include manipulation of emotional attachments to robots and increase in existing privacy risks. To respond to these implications, legal orders must acknowledge that robots are no longer mere tools of human interactions, but instead parties to such interactions. This paper, examines the unique implications on law and society presented by sociable robots, anthropomorphic machines by design. First, the phenomenon of robot anthropomorphism and its effects, and then, the risks presented by the sociable robots are addressed. As such, this chapter lays out the foundation for the examination of both the legal problems arising from the autonomy of robots, and the recommendations regarding the solution of these problems.}},
  author       = {{Öztürk, Anil}},
  booktitle    = {{Transformative Technologies : Legal and Ethical Challenges of the 21st Century}},
  editor       = {{Mirjanić, Željko and Milinković, Igor}},
  keywords     = {{AI law; Robot law; Privacy risks in robotics; Regulation of social robots; Law and emerging technologies; Jurisprudence; AI-rätt; Rättsvetenskap}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{493--510}},
  publisher    = {{Faculty of Law, University of Banja Luka}},
  title        = {{Anthropomorphic Machines : Implications of Human-Robot Social Interactions for Law and Society}},
  url          = {{https://www.ceeol.com/search/article-detail?id=1132141}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}