| Literature DB >> 35774354 |
Robin L Zebrowski1, Eli B McGraw2.
Abstract
AI (broadly speaking) as a discipline and practice has tended to misconstrue social cognition by failing to properly appreciate the role and structure of the interaction itself. Participatory Sense-Making (PSM) offers a new level of description in understanding the potential role of (particularly robotics-based) AGI in a social interaction process. Where it falls short in distinguishing genuine living sense-makers from potentially cognitive artificial systems, sociomorphing allows for gradations in how these potential systems are defined and incorporated into asymmetrical sociality. By side-stepping problems of anthropomorphism and muddy language around it, sociomorphing offers a framework and ontology that can help researchers make finer distinctions while studying social cognition through enactive sociality, PSM. We show here how PSM and sociomorphing, taken together and reconceived for more than just social robotics, can offer a robust framework for AGI robotics-based approaches.Entities:
Keywords: Participatory Sense-Making; anthropomorphism; artificial general intelligence; enactivism; social cognition; social robotics; sociomorphing
Year: 2022 PMID: 35774354 PMCID: PMC9239697 DOI: 10.3389/fnbot.2022.815850
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurorobot ISSN: 1662-5218 Impact factor: 3.493
Figure 1The modified second-person perspective in asymmetrical social interactions, adapted by Eli McGraw and Jacqueline McGraw from Seibt, Vestergaard and Damholdt 2020, with permission.