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ORi-Technology

How can ORi help connect various stakeholders of robotics technology in an easy and dynamic way? ORi aims to provide an online platform where you can share your ideas, and to foster collaborative processes of sharing and building knowledge in the field of roboethics.

Here’s an example of our concept.

[pullquote]Let us know what you think the robot should do by participating in the survey. [/pullquote] Imagine a scenario where an autonomous robot is in need of riding an elevator to do a delivery task. When the robot navigates itself to the elevator, it encounters a person who is waiting to ride the elevator. If the robot can’t ride the elevator with someone due to safety reasons, what should a robot do?

If the robot was on an urgent delivery mission, would this influence your decision? What if the person wasn’t waiting for the elevator, but was already riding it? The person could also be just a regular Joe, someone in a wheelchair, or someone who is carrying a box full of heavy objects.

We conducted an online survey to find out how we should be designing our algorithms to regulate the robot’s behaviour. We generated twelve survey questions using this scenario and varying factors such as the urgency of the robot’s task and state of the person. For each question, the survey participants had to rank the most appropriate behavior from four possible answers. The results of the survey were used to train a machine learning algorithm implemented in the PR2 robot from University of British Columbia.

With this example, we managed to input the moral and social norms of the stakeholders in the behavior design process. The actions that the robot takes when exposed to a certain situation are based on the survey results. This means that your input on what you think is the most appropriate robot behaviour through the survey directly affects how a robot behaves.

Are you keen to find out more about this work? Here’s a paper and a presentation on this work presented at the We Robot 2013 Conference hosted at the Stanford University.

Comments

  • Baby Boomer Writer

    April 15, 2015

    Robots unlike humans need to be governed by a specific job/purpose/mission. If this was an emergency delivery robot, it would have a way to signal or voice to the waiting person, “I am sorry, but this is an emergency delivery. Allow me to proceed alone please.” Robots need to have specific job designations or the ethics and civil behavior decisions they’re programmed with will conflict and render them unable to follow their coded decision tree.

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