Atlantis Studies in Humanoid and Social Robotics (ISSN: xxx-xxx) Series editor: Prof. Catherine Pelachaud, CNRS - LTCI, TELECOM-ParisTech, France Co-editors:
This book series aims at covering state-of-the-art research and developments in the field of humanoid and social robotics. The series covers all subjects on the mind and body of humanoid robots and 聽virtual humanoids. The series is dedicated to advancing new theories, new techniques, and new implementations contributing to the successful achievement of future robots which not only imitate human beings, but also serve human beings. Humanoid robots are interacting with humans to chat, perform tasks, be a companion, etc. They need to be endowed with capabilities such as showing emotions, be engaged in the interaction, remembering human's preferences. To be a social interactant, they must take into account their role, their interactants and the socio-cultural setting of the interaction. This book series is also interested in contributions related to emotion, engagement, social behaviors, expressive behaviours. Relevant topics for this series include: human-robot interaction, multimodal behaviours, emotion, physical and social awareness, personality, interaction capabilities. Machine learning and adaptation in human-robot interactions, ethical issues related to robot autonomy and acceptability of interactive robotics systems as well as case studies and applications. All book proposals submitted聽to聽this series will be reviewed by the series editor. After the book has been completed, it will be reviewed in its entirety聽by one dedicated editor. Only after this review聽will the book聽be published. Publishing information All books published are distributed and sold by Springer, both as e-books and in print. The books are also part of SpringerLink and included in the relevant Springer subject collections. Click here to learn more about the advantages authors have publishing with us. The series as a whole has as an ISSN-number, where each individual volume has its own ISBN-number. Atlantis Press adheres to the principles of Creative Commons, meaning that we do not claim copyright of the work we publish. We only ask people using one of our publications to respect the integrity of the work and to refer to the original location, title and author(s). See here for more details on the Atlantis Press publishing policy. Proposals Volumes published
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