BAILAR2024: The 8th Workshop on Behavior Adaptation, Interaction and Learning for Assistive Robotics August 26, 2024 |
Conference website | https://sites.google.com/view/bailar2024/home |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=bailar2024 |
Submission deadline | July 10, 2024 |
Call for Submissions to the 8th Workshop on Behavior Adaptation, Interaction and Learning for Assistive Robotics (BAILAR) at RO-MAN 2024
- Website: https://sites.google.com/view/bailar2024/home
- Workshop: August 26 2024 (TBC)
- Location: Pasadine, California (USA) as part of the the 33rd International Conference on Robots & Human Interactive Communication (RO-MAN 2024)
- Manuscript submission site: https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=bailar2024
- Contact for submissions: mariacarla.staffa@uniparthenope.it
THEME
Originating from its historical roots, the focal points of the BAILAR Workshop revolve around Behavior Adaptation, Interaction, and Learning for Assistive Robotics. Over the years, this workshop has delved into various topics aimed at understanding and adapting robot behavior to suit assistive scenarios. Particularly, emphasis has been placed on topics pertaining to Mutual affective understanding and Theory of Mind (ToM) between humans and robots.
Mutual affective understanding serves as a cornerstone for achieving successful, acceptable, and intelligent social human-robot interaction (HRI). This entails embracing novel paradigms in robotic control systems. These paradigms not only enable robots to interpret human observable behaviors and internal/emotional states to anticipate and adapt to subsequent reactions but also aid humans in interpreting and anticipating the robot’s state, intentions, and future actions through legible behavior designed around the emotional dimension of communication. It is crucial to equip robots with the capability to comprehend how human partners perceive the world and the robot itself, thus enabling better understanding and generation of behaviors comprehensible to humans.
Furthermore, robots should possess the ability to display affective and social responses in a clear manner for humans, thereby facilitating acceptability and efficient human-machine communication, especially in the realm of Socially and Assistive Robotics (SAR), where interactions often involve disabled or vulnerable individuals. Additionally, robots can alleviate the workload and physical contact of healthcare specialists, particularly benefiting situations where elderly or vulnerable individuals are susceptible to infection. Ensuring positive feelings and acceptance while providing necessary assistance underscores the significance of intelligent and empathic socially assistive robots.
In this context, it is imperative to consider the impact of verbal and non-verbal emotional social cues of the robot on the user's affective state during interaction. While robots can provide assistance to individuals with disabilities, their actions must be tailored to individual needs and expectations to prevent triggering negative emotions, such as stress or discomfort, which could be counterproductive. Robots could leverage affect-sensing capabilities to learn and adapt their behavior to better suit individuals and enhance learnability and acceptability through inclusive interaction.
The upcoming edition of the BAILAR Workshop aims to explore the mutual understanding of affective/emotional states between robots and humans, alongside learning and user adaptation within HRI. Methodologies and technologies for detecting and adapting to users’ mental states, emotions, and dispositions during HRI will be presented and discussed. Experimental protocols and results may shed light on potential effects of gender, age, personality, and pathology on robot perception from an emotional and affective standpoint, alongside ethical considerations regarding the acquisition and utilization of personal data within assistive applications.
IMPORTANT DATES
- Deadline for Paper Submission: July 10th, 2024
- Paper Acceptance Notification: July 31st, 2024
- Camera Ready Paper: August 5th, 2024
- Main Conference Date: August 26th–310th, 2024
- Workshop Date: August the 26th, 2024
Submission Guidelines
We welcome prospective participants to submit either extended abstracts (up to 4 pages) or full papers (up to 6 pages). Papers can be on research that the authors would like to discuss during the workshop, especially encouraging papers on new ideas or research that the authors plan to conduct.
Selected papers will be invited to submit an extended/revised version of the papers for a special issue in a recognized international journal.
We strongly encourage workshop participants to present during paper presentation demos and videos showing their experiments and achievements. All material collected during the Workshop, such as video, slides, papers, etc., will be made available on the workshop website upon approval of the authors.
The manuscripts should conform to the RO-MAN 2024 guidelines: https://www.ro-man2024.org
- Word template: http://ras.papercept.net/conferences/support/word.php
- LaTeX template: http://ras.papercept.net/conferences/support/tex.php
Submissions do not need to be anonymized for review.
All submitted papers will be reviewed by two reviewers. Accepted papers require that at least one of the authors register to the workshop. The abstracts of the accepted papers will appear on the workshop website.
- Authors will be able to submit a PDF copy through EasyChair: https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=bailar2024
List of Topics
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:
- Online adaptive behavior
- Acceptability and personalization in HRI
- User and behavior modeling for adaptation
- Emotion and intention recognition
- Multimodal interfaces for emotion recognition
- Affective and emotional robots
- Empathy in robotics
- Mutual affective communication
- Affective computing in SAR
- Internal state monitoring
- Detection of verbal and non-verbal behavioral cues
- Lifelong (or continual) learning and adaptation methods in HRI
- Short-term personalization in HRI
- Incremental and online learning in HRI
- Robot behavior explainability and legibility
- Theory of Mind in Robotics
- Understandable Communication
- Ethical Aspects of Affective HRI communication and personalization in SAR
- Evaluation metrics for adaptive robot behavior
Committees
Organizing committee
-
Mariacarla Staffa (Coordinator) - University of Naples Parthenope (Italy)
-
Alessandra Sciutti - IIT (Italy)
-
Silvia Rossi - University of Naples "Federico II" (Italy)
Invited Speakers
- Prof. Iolanda Leite (Confirmed - online)
- Prof. Laurel Riek (Confirmed - in presence)
- Prof. Minsu Jang (Confirmed - in presence)
Contact
All questions about submissions should be emailed to mariacarla.staffa@uniparthenope.it