DocumentCode
2334265
Title
‘The Japanese way of robotics’: Interacting ‘naturally’ with robots as a national character?
Author
Wagner, Cosima
Author_Institution
Japanese Studies Dept., Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Univ., Frankfurt / Main, Germany
fYear
2009
fDate
Sept. 27 2009-Oct. 2 2009
Firstpage
510
Lastpage
515
Abstract
Japan is often referred to as the ldquorobot kingdomrdquo, not only because it has the world´s largest number of industrial robots but also because of its ldquorobot culturerdquo which includes robot influenced narratives (comics / manga and animation films / anime), robot toys, a general popularity of robotics research, exhibitions (e.g., EXPO 2005, ROBODEX etc.) and robot competitions. In March 2008 the popular robot cat character ldquoDoraemonrdquo was even assigned ldquoanimation cultural ambassadorrdquo by the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) to promote Japanese culture worldwide. The general acceptance of robots as partners of human beings at the work place and at home is also a major argument of the Japanese government to strongly promote the use of ldquosocialrdquo robots in-and outside the factories to overcome the problems of the aging society, especially the decreasing number of Japan´s workforce population. In contrary to the western image of robots as frightening machines there seems to be a different concept and attitude in Japan. However, the discourse on the acceptance of robots in Japan lacks a differentiated view of the ldquoclassicalrdquo arguments for the popularity of robots. The paper will shed a new light on this discussion and explore the ldquonegotiation characterrdquo of the creation and use of technological artifacts like robots in Japan. It also aims to initiate a discussion between the humanities and natural sciences about the influence of culture on the development of robot technology.
Keywords
human-robot interaction; social sciences; Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Japanese culture; Japanese government; aging society; animation cultural ambassador; industrial robots; robot competitions; robot culture; robot technology; robot toys; social robots; Aging; Animation; Cultural differences; Government; Human robot interaction; Humanoid robots; Paper technology; Production facilities; Service robots; Toy industry;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robot and Human Interactive Communication, 2009. RO-MAN 2009. The 18th IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Toyama
ISSN
1944-9445
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-5081-7
Electronic_ISBN
1944-9445
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ROMAN.2009.5326221
Filename
5326221
Link To Document