About this Research Topic
Since 2011, a series of workshops, forums and programs have explored robotic art within the mainstream robotics research community. A growing community of practitioners has emerged through these gatherings: the community of researchers and practitioners connects the fields of art, design, music, performance and visual arts with computer science and engineering. This inherently cross-disciplinary community investigates new approaches for harnessing the power of aesthetics while formalising the research and methodological aspects of unconventional or cross-disciplinary approaches: interactive art and live performance present opportunities to situate and study robots in real-world settings with real people. Thus, we identify robotic art as having the potential to emerge as a key research area within the broader field of robotics.
This Research Topic intends to capture a broad and inclusive collection of work representing state of the art within the diverse disciplines that robotic art interacts with. The emphasis is on long-term and in-the-wild autonomous robotic systems in human-centred environments.
Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):
Robotic Art
- Robots in theatre, dance and musical performance
- Creative robotics
- Interactive robotic art
- Robots in cultural contexts
- Artist in the (robotics) lab
Design
- Participatory design
- Novel and creative applications
- Art and industry collaborations
Human-Robot Interaction
- User studies in artistic contexts, galleries and museums
- Long term interactions during artistic performance
- Movement-based interaction
- Human-centred robotics
Prof Damith Herath, University of Canberra, is also CEO of Robological PTY LTD, all other Topic Editors declare no competing interests with regards to the Research Topic subject.
Cover Image: TheObsessiveDrafter, credits: Guillaume Credoz, BitstoAtoms
Keywords: Human-Robot Interaction, Social Robotics, Collaborative Robots, Robotic Art, Creative Robotics
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