Excellence In Digital Sciences and Interdisciplinary Technologies (EXDIGIT) Project
Collaboration with Dr. Christine Bauer (PL University of Salzburg) and the EXDIGIT team. As part of the project, I will be working on gaining more insight into the many ways people interact with AI and how this knowledge can be used to guide new human-centered approaches.
HRI of Everyday Life
Collaboration with Dr. Karolina Zawieska (Aarhus University). We work on shaping a new research agenda for HRI research, which aims to study how the everyday is forming and transforming the lived experience people will have with their interaction and engagement with robots.
📝 Zawieska, K., & Hannibal, G. (2023). Towards a Conceptualisation and Critique of Everyday Life in HRI. Frontiers in Robotics and AI (sec. Human-Robot Interaction), 10:1212034 (pp. 1-14).
📝 Zawieska, K., & Hannibal, G. (2023). Towards a Conceptualisation and Critique of Everyday Life in HRI. Frontiers in Robotics and AI (sec. Human-Robot Interaction), 10:1212034 (pp. 1-14).
Human Behaviour and Machine Intelligence (HUMAINT) project
Collaboration with Dr. Vicky Charisi (EU Commission) and Dr. Astrid Weiss (TU Wien). In our project on trust in HRI, we are planning and conducting an (online) HRI study to explore aspects of vulnerability and attitude of benevolence across different interaction scenarios in the context of retail.
📝 Hannibal, G., Weiss, W. & Charisi, V. (2021). "The robot may not notice my discomfort" – Examining the Experience of Vulnerability for Trust in Human-Robot Interaction. Proceedings of the 30th IEEE International Conference on Robot & Human Interactive Communication (pp. 704-711). Vancouver, BC (online): IEEE.
📝 Hannibal, G., Weiss, W. & Charisi, V. (2021). "The robot may not notice my discomfort" – Examining the Experience of Vulnerability for Trust in Human-Robot Interaction. Proceedings of the 30th IEEE International Conference on Robot & Human Interactive Communication (pp. 704-711). Vancouver, BC (online): IEEE.
Explainable AI and Robotics
Collaboration with Dr. Felix Lindner (Ulm University). In our work we explore both the technical aspects of explainable AI and robotic systems and the philosophical implications.
📝 Hannibal, G. & Lindner, F. (2023). Towards a Questions-Centered Approach to Explainable Human-Robot Interaction. Proceedings of Robophilosophy 2022 – Social Robots in Social Institutions (pp. 406-415), Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications Series. Helsinki, Finland: IOS Press.
📝 Hannibal, G. & Lindner, F. (2023). Towards a Questions-Centered Approach to Explainable Human-Robot Interaction. Proceedings of Robophilosophy 2022 – Social Robots in Social Institutions (pp. 406-415), Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications Series. Helsinki, Finland: IOS Press.
Trust Robots Doctoral College
Collaboration with Dr. Astrid Weiss (TU Wien) and Anna Dobrosovestnova (TU Wien). As one of the 10 doctoral students, I analyse and study the conceptual relation between trust and vulnerability to advance research on interpersonal in HRI.
📝 Hannibal, G., Dobrosovestnova, A. & Weiss, A. (2022). Tolerating Untrustworthy Robots: Studying Human Vulnerability Experience within a Privacy Scenario for Trust in Robots. Proceedings of the 31st IEEE International Conference on Robot & Human Interactive Communication (pp. 821-828). Naples, Italy: IEEE.
📝 Hannibal, G., Dobrosovestnova, A. & Weiss, A. (2022). Tolerating Untrustworthy Robots: Studying Human Vulnerability Experience within a Privacy Scenario for Trust in Robots. Proceedings of the 31st IEEE International Conference on Robot & Human Interactive Communication (pp. 821-828). Naples, Italy: IEEE.
Shared Space
Collaboration with Dr. Astrid Weiss (TU Wien). As one aspect of this project, we have been working on developing and validating our Everyday-Life Centered Approach (ELCA) in order to advance also a theoretical perspective on long-term HRI studies.
📝 Weiss, A. & Hannibal, G. (2018). What makes people accept or reject companion robots? A research agenda, Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Pervasive Technologies Related to Assistive Environments (pp. 397-404). Corfu, Greece: ACM.
📝 Weiss, A. & Hannibal, G. (2018). What makes people accept or reject companion robots? A research agenda, Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Pervasive Technologies Related to Assistive Environments (pp. 397-404). Corfu, Greece: ACM.