Posthuman Publics: Emerging Research in Human-Machine Communication

Authors

  • Jaime Banks West Virginia University
  • Autumn Edwards West Michigan University
  • Anna Joblin University of Lausanne
  • Seth Lewis University of Oregon
  • Chad Edwards West Virginia University
  • David Westerman North Dakota University
  • Patric Spence University of Kentucky
  • Andrea Guzman Northern Illinois University

Keywords:

Publics, social robots, algorithms, news, machines

Abstract

In both its academic and lay uses, for centuries “public” has referred to "people." From an Aristotelian perspective, publics of varying scale emerge as speech (or logos) binds people together, catalyzing and materializing through dyadic and larger-scale interactions. But how might publics emerge when some interlocutors are not people, exactly, but other types of social agents -- as information and communication technologies gain increased agency, transitioning from things we communicate through to social actors we communicate with? This panel approaches these questions through empirical reports of four studies addressing the implications of human-machine communication at three levels – individual perceptions, dyadic interactions, and commercial and institutional dynamics – and accounts for interactions with and framings of social robots, algorithms, and artificial intelligence.

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Published

2017-10-31

How to Cite

Banks, J., Edwards, A., Joblin, A., Lewis, S., Edwards, C., Westerman, D., … Guzman, A. (2017). Posthuman Publics: Emerging Research in Human-Machine Communication. AoIR Selected Papers of Internet Research. Retrieved from https://spir.aoir.org/ojs/index.php/spir/article/view/10020

Issue

Section

Panels