Me, My Bot and His Other (Robot) Woman? Keeping Your Robot Satisfied in the Age of Artificial Emotion

With a backdrop of action and science fiction movie horrors of the dystopian relationship between humans and robots, surprisingly to date-with the exception of ethical discussions-the relationship aspect of humans and sex robots has seemed relatively unproblematic. The attraction to sex robots perha...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rebekah Rousi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-08-01
Series:Robotics
Subjects:
sex
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2218-6581/7/3/44
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spelling doaj-92d1ab27748943b88152a6e1321dabb72020-11-25T02:28:29ZengMDPI AGRobotics2218-65812018-08-01734410.3390/robotics7030044robotics7030044Me, My Bot and His Other (Robot) Woman? Keeping Your Robot Satisfied in the Age of Artificial EmotionRebekah Rousi0Cognitive Science, Faculty of Information Technology, University of Jyvaskyla, 40014 Jyväskylän yliopisto, FinlandWith a backdrop of action and science fiction movie horrors of the dystopian relationship between humans and robots, surprisingly to date-with the exception of ethical discussions-the relationship aspect of humans and sex robots has seemed relatively unproblematic. The attraction to sex robots perhaps is the promise of unproblematic affectionate and sexual interactions, without the need to consider the other’s (the robot’s) emotions and indeed preference of sexual partners. Yet, with rapid advancements in information technology and robotics, particularly in relation to artificial intelligence and indeed, artificial emotions, there almost seems the likelihood, that sometime in the future, robots too, may love others in return. Who those others are-whether human or robot-is to be speculated. As with the laws of emotion, and particularly that of the cognitive-emotional theory on Appraisal, a reality in which robots experience their own emotions, may not be as rosy as would be expected.http://www.mdpi.com/2218-6581/7/3/44emotionsrobotssexinfidelityartificial intelligence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rebekah Rousi
spellingShingle Rebekah Rousi
Me, My Bot and His Other (Robot) Woman? Keeping Your Robot Satisfied in the Age of Artificial Emotion
Robotics
emotions
robots
sex
infidelity
artificial intelligence
author_facet Rebekah Rousi
author_sort Rebekah Rousi
title Me, My Bot and His Other (Robot) Woman? Keeping Your Robot Satisfied in the Age of Artificial Emotion
title_short Me, My Bot and His Other (Robot) Woman? Keeping Your Robot Satisfied in the Age of Artificial Emotion
title_full Me, My Bot and His Other (Robot) Woman? Keeping Your Robot Satisfied in the Age of Artificial Emotion
title_fullStr Me, My Bot and His Other (Robot) Woman? Keeping Your Robot Satisfied in the Age of Artificial Emotion
title_full_unstemmed Me, My Bot and His Other (Robot) Woman? Keeping Your Robot Satisfied in the Age of Artificial Emotion
title_sort me, my bot and his other (robot) woman? keeping your robot satisfied in the age of artificial emotion
publisher MDPI AG
series Robotics
issn 2218-6581
publishDate 2018-08-01
description With a backdrop of action and science fiction movie horrors of the dystopian relationship between humans and robots, surprisingly to date-with the exception of ethical discussions-the relationship aspect of humans and sex robots has seemed relatively unproblematic. The attraction to sex robots perhaps is the promise of unproblematic affectionate and sexual interactions, without the need to consider the other’s (the robot’s) emotions and indeed preference of sexual partners. Yet, with rapid advancements in information technology and robotics, particularly in relation to artificial intelligence and indeed, artificial emotions, there almost seems the likelihood, that sometime in the future, robots too, may love others in return. Who those others are-whether human or robot-is to be speculated. As with the laws of emotion, and particularly that of the cognitive-emotional theory on Appraisal, a reality in which robots experience their own emotions, may not be as rosy as would be expected.
topic emotions
robots
sex
infidelity
artificial intelligence
url http://www.mdpi.com/2218-6581/7/3/44
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