*apologies for multiple postings*
*Extended deadline due to summer break - Submissions accepted until
August 24th, 2015*
Dear Roboticist,
We are please to invite you to our IROS 2015 full-day workshop
*TOWARDS STANDARDIZED EXPERIMENTS IN HUMAN-ROBOT INTERACTIONS*
September 28th, 2015 - Hamburg, Germany
Workshop website:
http://clawar.org/towards-standarised-experiments-in-human-robot-interactions/
IROS website: http://iros2015.org/
*********************
Call for Contribution
*********************
We invite workshop participants to submit extended abstracts (up to 4
pages) in PDF and IEEE format. For templates and examples follow the
link http://ras.papercept.net/conferences/support/support.php.
The abstracts will be presented as posters in a dedicated slot during
our workshop. Alternatively, workshop participants can submit a poster
only. Those posters will be presented in the same poster session as
extended abstract posters. To enable us a structured planning of the
workshop day, please submit your poster together with a very short
abstract (less than one page).
Please submit your contributions to [log in to unmask]
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> cc:[log in to unmask] no later
than August, 24th. All submission will be refereed by the organizing
committee of the workshop.
*********************
Important Dates
*********************
Submission: 24th August, 2015
Notification: 7th September, 2015
Camera-ready: 21st September, 2015
Workshop: 28th September, 2015
*********************
Objectives
*********************
This workshop is aimed at advancing the topic of standardization of
robot experiments in Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) scenarios. We want to
tackle HRI as a horizontal topic across all robotics domains. This
means, that HRI does not necessarily mean physical contact, but involves
social ability, conversation, feedback to the human, such as making
robotic arm gestures. While the R&D community produces great amounts of
scientific outputs on HRI, the results are scattered in a myriad of
different approaches and ways of performing and testing the interaction;
metrics which have been used include efficacy, effectiveness, users
satisfaction, emotional impact and social components. The main
consequence is that results are not comparable and benchmarking of the
various approaches proposed is not possible. The community is still
missing consensus tools to benchmark robot products (robot
producer/industrial perspective) and robot applications
(research/academic perspective). Modes are required for the standardized
assessment of robot products and applications in use in terms of safety,
performance, user experience, and ergonomics. The benefit of agreed
approaches and methods to the assessment of HRI is the production of
results, so called "normative" data in the standardization community,
meaning that they have been formulated via wide consultation in an open
and transparent manner. In this way, the results become widely
acceptable, and can be exploited for the creation of international
quality norms and standards which in turn would mean measurable robot
performances in terms of HRI. We would like to draw from a wide set of
experts from the industry, academy and standardization to focus on the
key areas of industrial, personal care and medical robots. Together, we
will work on establishing benchmarking scenarios and identifying
suitable metrics common to HRI in these central and related robotics
domains. As a result we aim for providing metrics and scenarios for
robot producers and HRI researchers to evaluate their robots and robot
systems and setups on a comparable level. Reproducible and comparable
results and interoperable systems should be a long-term goal will be a
valuable contribution to our community. Within the WS, there will be
paper presentations, posters and hands-on panel discussion sessions in
the WS and we invite interested WS participants to present their inputs
as appropriate.
The event follows up on previous workshops focusing on international
robot standardization and benchmarking in the areas of industrial,
medical, and personal care robots (ICRA 2013, HRI 2014, IROS 2014 and
ERF 2015).
*********************
Topics of interest
*********************
* Defining metrics for benchmarking HRI
o Safety and physical interactions
o Performance indicators for experiments
o User-Experience
o Ergonomics
* Defining standardized scenarios for HRI
o Industrial, medical, and personal care robots
o Publicly available datasets for evaluation
o Robot autonomy levels
*********************
Speakers
*********************
/Paolo Barattini/, Kontor 46, Italy - Update from previous workshops
from the TG Standardization
/Gurvinder Singh Virk/, University of Gävle, Sweden - Update on
international standardization projects and relevance in Europe
/Sven Wachsmuth/, University of Bielefeld, Germany -- Standardization in
Robocup@home
/Björn Matthias/, ABB - The Role of Collision Experiments in Safety
Standardization and in the Characterization of Collaborative Robots,
Systems and Applications
/Claudia Pagliari/, University of Edinburgh, UK - Taxonomies and
operational definitions of interactive robot applications
/Andrea Bonarini/, Politecnico di Milano - Benchmarking medical HRI,
robot therapy for the disabled
/Reinhard Lafrenz/, TUM, Germany - Standards and Experiments in Echord++
/Markus Rickert/, Fortiss, Germany - Industrial HRI Experiments in the
SMErobotics project
/Hooman Samani/, National Taipei University, Taiwan - Possible standard
evaluation method for HRI
/Laurence Devillers/, Paris-Sorbonne University, France - Affective and
social spoken dialog in robotics: evaluation of user engagement
/Agnieszka Wykowska/, LMU, Germany - The method and objective measures
of social cognitive neuroscience for reliability of results in HRI
*********************
Organizers
*********************
Nicole Mirnig, Center for Human-Computer Interaction, University of
Salzburg, Austria
Paolo Barattini, Kontor 46, Torino, Italy
Dimitris Chrysostomou, Aalborg University, Denmark
Lars Dalgaard, Danish Technological Institute, Funen, Denmark
Maria Elena Giannaccini, University of Salford, Manchester, UK
Manuel Giuliani, Center for Human-Computer Interaction, University of
Salzburg, Austria
Tamás Haidegger, Obuda University, Budapest, Hungary
Adriana Tapus, Robotics and Computer Vision Lab, ENSTA-ParisTech, Paris,
France
Gurvinder Singh Virk, University of Gävle, Sweden
We are looking forward to your contribution and participation!
Hope to see you in Hamburg,
Nicole Mirnig
- on behalf of all organizers
--
Mag. Nicole Mirnig
Research Fellow
Center for Human-Computer Interaction
Christian Doppler Laboratory "Contextual Interfaces"
Department of Computer Science
University of Salzburg
Sigmund-Haffner-Gasse 18
5020 Salzburg, Austria
Phone: +43.662.8044.4840
Fax: +43.662.8044.744800
Email: [log in to unmask]
http://icts.uni-salzburg.at
http://contextual-interfaces.org
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