Eleonore Lumer

@eleonore_lola
21 Followers
27 Following
6 Posts
Dialogue Designer @ PolyAI | PhD computational linguistics | Human–Robot Interaction
đź”— Websitehttps://wwwhomes.uni-bielefeld.de/elumer

There's an open consultation on the proposed north–south tram routes in #Edinburgh. There are two options: one through an existing park, one on an existing road. Have a look and share your views with the Council!

https://consultationhub.edinburgh.gov.uk/sfc/tram-north-south/

#publictransport #tram #trams

Trams from Granton to Edinburgh BioQuarter and Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh and Beyond - City of Edinburgh Council - Citizen Space

Find and participate in consultations run by City of Edinburgh Council

Sind wir nur höflich zu Maschinen, weil wir Angst haben, dass diese eines Tages die Weltherrschaft übernehmen? Eleonore Lumer forscht an der Universität Bielefeld zu Höflichkeit in Mensch-Maschine-Interaktionen und erzählt auf Youtube aus ihrer Forschung: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UM7600nt0FE&t=302s
Warum bedanken wir uns bei Alexa? | Höflichkeit in Mensch-Maschine-Interaktionen mit Eleonore Lumer

YouTube
In this video, @dililab researcher and PhD student @eleonore_lola talks about her research on politeness in human-machine interaction: (Why) are we polite when talking to a chatbot/voice assistant/robot?
https://nrw.social/@linguistikstudieren/112729039601068797
I am very happy to be one of this year’s HRI Pioneers! 🥳 I will present my PhD project on modeling politeness in Human–Robot interaction. https://hripioneers.org/participants #HRI #linguistics #pioneers
HRI 2024 - Pioneers Workshop

Human-Robot Interaction HRI 2024 Pioneers Workshop

#Linguistics at Bielefeld was recently awarded a Sonderforschungsbereich (SFB), or collaborative research centre, which will feature nearly 20 projects dealing with creativity in language. There are 30 (!) #PhD positions across these projects, for which you can apply here: https://uni-bielefeld.hr4you.org/job/view/3067/research-positions?page_lang=
en
Research Positions

Should robots be polite? In an interview study, we explored participants’ ideas and expectations about a #Furhat robot’s politeness and compared them with their ideas for human–human interaction. We found two different #politeness strategies for human–human interaction: adaptive politeness and rule-governed politeness, of which only one is expected from robots. You can read all about it here: https://doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2023.1242127 @hbuschme @dililab
Should robots be polite? Expectations about politeness in human–robot interaction

Interaction with artificial social agents is often designed based on models of human interaction and dialogue. While this is certainly useful for basic interaction mechanisms, it has been argued that social communication strategies and social language use, a “particularly human” ability, may not be appropriate and transferable to interaction with artificial conversational agents. In this paper, we present qualitative research exploring whether users expect artificial agents to use politeness—a fundamental mechanism of social communication—in language-based human-robot interaction. Based on semi-structured interviews, we found that humans mostly ascribe a functional, rule-based use of polite language to humanoid robots and do not expect them to apply socially motivated politeness strategies that they expect in human interaction. This study 1) provides insights for interaction design for social robots’ politeness use from a user perspective, and 2) contributes to politeness research based on the analysis of our participants’ perspectives on politeness.

Frontiers