Attending – HRI2010 http://humanrobotinteraction.org/2010 5th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot Interaction, March 2-5 2010, Osaka Tue, 05 Apr 2011 20:22:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.7.3 Conference Program Available http://humanrobotinteraction.org/2010/2010/02/conference-program-available/ Tue, 09 Feb 2010 03:46:02 +0000 http://hri2010.org/?p=328 Full conference program is now available as a PDF file. Click on the thumbnail below to download.

HRI10-Thumbnail

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Bus Tour http://humanrobotinteraction.org/2010/2010/01/bus-tour/ Sun, 24 Jan 2010 10:05:21 +0000 http://hri2010.org/?p=298 We already closed the registration for the bus tour since it reached the maximum passenger count. Thanks.

The HRI conference is proud to announce the availability of a bus tour to three outstanding research laboratories on March 1st, 2010. We will visit:

The preliminary schedule is:

  • 9:00 – Start of the tour, the meeting point is at the Business Innovation Center Osaka
  • 10:00~11:30 – Technical tour at Osaka Univiversity
  • 12:30~13:30 – Lunch (Tenpura and Udon) at Osaka, 美々卯(mimiu). A vegetarian menu is available. The lunch is included in the registration fee.
  • 14:30~16:00 – Technical tour at ATR.
  • 17:30 – End of the tour, the bus will arrive at the Business Innovation Center Osaka
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Student volunteers http://humanrobotinteraction.org/2010/2010/01/student-volunteers/ Wed, 20 Jan 2010 22:45:56 +0000 http://hri2010.org/?p=293 We are pleased to announce that there is funding available to partially support Student Volunteers’ travel to HRI 2010.  Students receiving support will be expected to volunteer time to help with on-site registration and with general duties, as needed, from 1 March (early on-site registration, tutorials and workshops) to 5 March, 2010. Being a Student Volunteer is a great way to enter the HRI research community, meet other students in your field, and attend one of most important conferences in HRI. We are looking to include students with diverse backgrounds in HRI and from all parts of the world.

To request funding, please send the following information to hri.studentvolunteer@gmail.com

(1) Provide:

  1. Your Name,
  2. Your Affiliation (name and address of college/university),
  3. Your Contact Information (email address and telephone number(s)).

(2) Indicate:

  1. whether you are a part-time or full-time student, and include the name of your faculty advisor with email and telephone contact information;
  2. whether or not you are a (co)author of a paper or a late-breaking report at HRI10;
  3. if you are receiving or requesting funding from the Young Researchers Workshop on 2 March 2010
  4. Please include information about your area of study.

(3) A statement of your requested funding amount and a brief justification of your funding needs (250 words maximum).

Note that you do not have to have an accepted paper/poster at HRI10 to be considered for financial support. The deadline for the information submission is February 1, 2010.

Student Volunteers Co-Chairs

Min Kyung Lee
Carnegie Mellon University

Laurel Riek
University of Cambridge

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Workshops and tutorials at HRI2010 http://humanrobotinteraction.org/2010/2010/01/workshops-and-tutorials-at-hri2010/ Thu, 07 Jan 2010 16:52:35 +0000 http://hri2010.org/?p=271 The following workshops and tutorial will be held on Tuesday March 2, 2010.

You can register for workshops and tutorials at https://www.regonline.com/hri_10_2010_human_robot_interaction_conference.

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Registration is now open. http://humanrobotinteraction.org/2010/2009/12/registration-now-opens/ Thu, 10 Dec 2009 01:21:01 +0000 http://hri2010.org/?p=228 The registration page is now open. Please register at https://www.regonline.com/hri_10_2010_human_robot_interaction_conference.

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Keynote of Josep Call http://humanrobotinteraction.org/2010/2009/11/keynote-of-josep-call/ Thu, 05 Nov 2009 08:07:34 +0000 http://hri2010.org/?p=212 We are pleased to announce that Joseph Call will give a keynote speech at the HRI2010 conference. The title of his talk is: “Action understanding and gesture acquisition in the great apes

call_gorilla

Abstract

A growing number of scholars have suggested that gestural communication may have been especially important in the early stages of language origins. Of special interest in this debate is the communication of other primates, especially those most closely related to humans, the great apes. The aim of this talk is to explore the interrelations between instrumental actions, action understanding and gesture generation in humans and other apes. In doing so, I will contrast the similarities and differences in the use and comprehension of gestures in humans and apes. Like humans, apes use gestures flexibly and they can even learn new gestures. Unlike humans, however, imitative learning does not seem to be the main mechanism underlying gesture acquisition in great apes. Instead apes seem to learn many of their gestures in social interaction with others via processes of ontogenetic ritualization by means of which instrumental actions are transformed into gestures. Like humans, apes can extract information about the goals contained in the actions of others but there is much less evidence that they also grasp some of the representational properties of certain kinds of gestures and the communicative intentions behind them.

Bio

Josep Call is co-founder and director of the Wolfgang Köhler Primate Research Center (WKPRC) at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology (MPI-EVA) in Leipzig, Germany, and a senior scientist at the department of Developmental and Comparative Psychology of the MPI-EVA. The WKPRC is the only center worldwide dedicated to the comparative study of the cognition of all four nonhuman great apes. He holds a Bachelors degree in Psychology from the Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona and Masters and Doctorate degrees from Emory University. Prior to joining the MPI-EVA, he was a lecturer at the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Liverpool. He has published two books and nearly two hundred articles and book chapters on the behavior and cognition of apes and other animals and has presented his work on numerous occasions at international. He is currently the associate editor of the Journal of Comparative Psychology and a member of the editorial board of several other academic journals.

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Call for papers http://humanrobotinteraction.org/2010/2009/06/call-for-papers/ Fri, 12 Jun 2009 03:15:44 +0000 http://hri2010.org/?p=91 The call for participation is now available as an A3 Poster and as an A4 Flyer. Please download and distribute them.

HRI 2010 Poster HRI 2010 Flyer
A3 Poster A4 Flyer
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