Papers of Workshop „Conversational Agents“

The papers of the CHI 2019 workshop „Conversational Agents: Acting on the Wave of Research and Development“ (Glasgow, 5 May 2019) are now listed on convagents.org. The extended abstract by Oliver Bendel (School of Business FHNW) entitled „Chatbots as Moral and Immoral Machines“ can be downloaded here. The workshop brought together experts from all over the world who are working on the basics of chatbots and voicebots and are implementing them in different ways. Companies such as Microsoft, Mozilla and Salesforce were also present. Approximately 40 extended abstracts were submitted. On 6 May, a bagpipe player opened the four-day conference following the 35 workshops. Dr. Aleks Krotoski, Pillowfort Productions, gave the first keynote. One of the paper sessions in the morning was dedicated to the topic „Values and Design“. All in all, both classical specific fields of applied ethics and the young discipline of machine ethics were represented at the conference. More information via chi2019.acm.org.

Fig.: A bagpipe player

Ethik bei der CHI

Der CHI-2019-Workshop „Conversational Agents: Acting on the Wave of Research and Development“ (Glasgow, 5. Mai 2019) brachte Expertinnen und Experten aus der ganzen Welt zusammen, die Grundlagen zu Chatbots und Sprachassistenten erarbeiten und diese in unterschiedlicher Weise umsetzen. Dabei waren auch Unternehmen wie Microsoft, Mozilla und Salesforce. Herausgegriffen seien nur drei Papers von ca. 20 angenommenen (ca. 40 waren eingereicht worden). Das Thema von Fabia Catania (Politecnico di Milano) waren „Conversational Technologies Supporting Social Inclusion“. „Comparing Data from Chatbot and Web Surveys“ lautete der Titel des Papers von Soomin Kim, Seoul National University. Oliver Bendel (School of Business FHNW) präsentierte drei zwischen 2013 und 2018 in der Disziplin der Maschinenethik entwickelte Chatbots, nämlich GOODBOT, LIEBOT und BESTBOT („Chatbots as Moral and Immoral Machines“). Am 6. Mai eröffnete ein Dudelsackspieler die an die 35 Workshops anschließende viertägige Konferenz mit fast 4000 Teilnehmerinnen und Teilnehmern. Dr. Aleks Krotoski, Pillowfort Productions, hielt die erste Keynote. Eine der Paper Sessions am Vormittag widmete sich dem Thema „Values and Design“. Insgesamt waren sowohl die klassischen Bereichsethiken als auch die Maschinenethik auf der Konferenz vertreten. Weitere Informationen über convagents.org (Link nicht mehr gültig) und chi2019.acm.org.

Abb.: Dudelsackspieler bei der CHI 2019 in Glasgow

Chatbots in Glasgow

„In the last five years, work on software that interacts with people via typed or spoken natural language, called chatbots, intelligent assistants, social bots, virtual companions, non-human players, and so on, increased dramatically. Chatbots burst into prominence in 2016. Then came a wave of research, more development, and some use. The time is right to assess what we have learned from endeavoring to build conversational user interfaces that simulate quasi-human partners engaged in real conversations with real people.“ (Website Conversational Agents) The CHI 2019 workshop „Conversational Agents: Acting on the Wave of Research and Development“ (Glasgow, 5 May) brings together people „who developed or studied various conversational agents, to explore themes that include what works (and hasn’t) in home, education, healthcare, and work settings, what we have learned from this about people and their activities, and social or ethical possibilities for good or risk“ (Website Conversational Agents). Oliver Bendel will present three chatbots developed between 2013 and 2018 in the discipline of machine ethics, GOODBOT, LIEBOT and BESTBOT. More information via convagents.org.

Fig.: In a museum in Glasgow