How Human Do We Want Our Robots To Be?

How Human Do We Want Our Robots To Be?

Robots are starting to look suspiciously familiar. Increasingly sophisticated robots designed to resemble us are striking up more and more symbiotic relationships with humans, at home as our companions, and at our workplaces as colleagues.

Human-robot interactions will continue to evolve as robotic technology transforms the way we see our creations, and the way they react to us. But as machines cease acting like machines and become more integrated into our lives, how will we feel about them? And, dare we ask, how will they feel about us?

Join Future Tense for lunch in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, January 20th to explore the future of human robot interaction. Cannot make it in person? This event will be live streamed at https://www.newamerica.org/future-tense/how-human-do-we-want-our-robots-....

Follow the discussion online using #HumanRobots and follow us @FutureTenseNow.

Participants:

Patric Verrone, Writer and producer of Futurama
@pverrone

Woodrow Hartzog, Assistant Professor at the Cumberland School of Law at Samford University
@hartzog

Lance Gharavi, Associate Professor and Assistant Director of Theatre at Arizona State University
@lancegharavi

Christine Rosen, Future Tense Fellow and Senior Editor, The New Atlantis
@tnajournal

Future Tense is a partnership of Arizona State University, New America and Slate.

Roxanne Ladd
ASU Washington, DC
202-446-0381
roxanne.ladd@asu.edu
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