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Creating Relationships with Computers and Robots 19
Italy). Maria Miceli (Italian National Research Council, Italy) and Paola Rizzo (Univ. of Rome
“La Sapienza”, Italy) kindly acted as additional reviewers for the 2000 AAAI Fall Symposium.
Notes
1. Examples of collections of articles on SIA research in book and special journal issues are:
K.Dautenhahn, C. Numaoka (guest editors): Socially Intelligent Agents, Special Issues of Applied Artificial
Intelligence, Vol. 12 (7-8), 1998, and Vol. 13(3), 1999, K.Dautenhahn (2000): Human Cognition and
Social Agent Technology, John Benjamins Publishing Company, B. Edmonds and K. Dautenhahn (guest
editors): Social Intelligence, special issue of Computational and Mathematical Organisation Theory,Vol.
5(3), 1999, K. Dautenhahn (guest editor): Simulation Models of Social Agents, special issue of Adaptive
Behavior, Vol. 7(3-4), 1999, Bruce Edmonds and Kerstin Dautenhahn (guest editors): Starting from Society
- the application of social analogies to computational systems, special issue of The Journal of Artificial
Societies and Social Simulation (JASSS), 2001. Kerstin Dautenhahn (guest editor): Socially Intelligent
Agents – The Human in the Loop, special issue of IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics,
Part A: Systems and Humans, Vol. 31(5), 2001; Lola Cañamero and Paolo Petta (guest editors), Grounding
emotions in adaptive systems, special issue of Cybernetics and Systems, Vol. 32(5) and Vol. 32(6), 2001.
2. see events listed on the SIA Webpage: http://homepages.feis.herts.ac.uk/ comqkd/aaai-social.html
3. Guest Editor: Kerstin Dautenhahn. Table of Contents: Guest Editorial: Socially Intelligent Agents
- The Human in the Loop by Kerstin Dautenhahn; Understanding Socially Intelligent Agents – A Multi-
Layered Phenomenon by Per Persson, Jarmo Laaksolahti, Peter Lönnqvist; The child behind the character
by Ana Paiva, Isabel Machado, Rui Prada, Agents supported adaptive group awareness: Smart distance
and WWWare by Yiming Ye, Stephen Boies, Paul Huang, John K. Tsotsos; Socially intelligent reasoning
for autonomous agents by Lisa Hogg and N. Jennings; Evaluating humanoid synthetic agents in e-retail
applications by Helen McBreen, Mervyn Jack, The Human in the Loop of a Delegated Agent: The Theory
of Adjustable Social Autonomy by Rino Falcone and Cristiano Castelfranchi; Learning and Interacting in
Human-Robot Domains by Monica N. Nicolescu and Maja J. Matari¢; Learning and communication via
imitation: an autonomous robot perspective by P. Andry, P. Gaussier, S. Moga, J. P. Banquet, J. Nadel;
Active vision for sociable robots by Cynthia Breazeal, Aaron Edsinger, Paul Fitzpatrick, Brian Scassellati;
I Show You How I Like You: Can You Read it in My Face? by Lola D. Cañamero, Jakob Fredslund;
Diminishing returns of engineering effort in telerobotic systems by Myra Wilson, Mark Neal and Let’s Talk!
Socially Intelligent Agents for Language Conversation Training by Helmut Prendinger, Mitsuru Ishizuka.
4. Compare [8] for teaching the recognition and understanding of emotions and mental states.
References
[1] Jeffrey M. Bradshaw, editor. Software Agents. AAAI Press/The MIT Press, 1997.
[2] Justine Cassell, Joseph Sullivan, Scott Prevost, and Elizabeth Churchill, editors. Embod-
ied conversational agents. MIT Press, 2000.
[3] K. Dautenhahn, editor. Human Cognition and Social Agent Technology. John Benjamins
Publishing Company, 2000.
[4] K. Dautenhahn and C. L. Nehaniv, editors. Imitation in Animals and Artifacts.MIT Press
(in press), 2002.
[5] Kerstin Dautenhahn. The art of designing socially intelligent agents: science, fiction and
the human in the loop. Applied Artificial Intelligence Journal, Special Issue on Socially
Intelligent Agents, 12(7-8):573–617, 1998.
[6] Mark D’Inverno and Michael Luck, editors. Understanding Agent Systems.The MIT
Press, 2001.
[7] Allison Druin and James Hendler, editors. Robots for Kids – Exploring new technologies
for learning. Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, 2000.