4.4 Article

Do Robots Have Sex? A Prolegomenon

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Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12369-023-01052-7

Keywords

Robots; Gender; Ethics; Sex; Human-robot interaction; Social robotics

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This paper outlines a research program on the gendering of robots and the ethical issues it raises. It identifies design features that may influence gender attribution and highlights the importance of considering various factors such as age, class, sex, ethnicity, and sexuality in understanding how robots are gendered. The paper also calls for progress in robot media ethics and emphasizes the responsibilities of designers and users in addressing the ethical implications of gendering robots.
Research in Human-Robot Interaction (HRI) suggests that people attribute gender to (some) robots. In this paper we outline a program of research on the gendering of robots and on the ethical issues raised by such gendering. Understanding which robots are gendered, when, and why, will require careful research in HRI, drawing on anthropology and social psychology, informed by state-of-the-art research in gender studies and critical theory. Design features of robots that might influence the attribution of gender include: appearance; tone of voice; speech repertoire; range and style of movement; behaviour; and, intended function. Robots may be gendered differently depending on: the age, class, sex, ethnicity, and sexuality of the person doing the attributing; local cultural histories; social cues from the designers, the physical and institutional environment, and other users; and the role of the robot. An adequate account of the gender of robots will also need to pay attention to the limits of a sex/gender distinction, which has historically been maintained by reference to a sex located in a biological body, when it comes to theorising the gender of robots. We argue that, on some accounts of what it is to be sexed, robots might have sex: they might be male and female in just the same way as (most) human beings are. Addressing the ethical issues raised by the gendering of robots will require further progress in robot media ethics, as well as an account of the responsibilities of both designers and users in a broader social context.

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