What counts as a robot Sample Clauses

What counts as a robot. To put the issue simply, a ‘humanoid-looking ICT-enabled metal thing’ is usually considered as a robot, as are non-humanoid ICT-enabled machines that carry out tasks once undertaken by humans. However, we do not normally think of a smartphone, also packed with sensors and software and ever more artificial intelligence, as a robot. Where do we draw the boundary? Isn’t the Internet of Things already a giant, networked assembly of robots? While this distinction is highly problematic, that does not mean that it is not meaningful; the public perception of the ‘robot’ comes with a number of fears and expectations attached, which are very different from those attached to the ‘non-robot’. During our activities leading to the preparation of this report, this is an issue that the Neurorobotics Subproject has raised repeatedly. It was also raised at a public event on robots and elderly care that we attended, organised at the House of Lords by BioCentre, a UK think–tank concerned with the ethical, social and political implications presented by new emerging technologies.19
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