Part I: Fundamentals of Human-Robot Interaction 1. Robotics 2. Human information processing 3. R&D framework/platform 4. Applications
PART II: Determinants of Trust in Human-Robot Interaction 5. Individual differences 6. Social factors 7. Transparency 8. Understanding robot intent 9. Robot behavior and trust 10. Contextual factors and trust 11. Agent-based systems 12. Communication and trust 13. Physical Design and trust 14. Engagement and trust A. Modelling trust in HRI
PART III: Human-Robot Interaction and Emerging Issues 11. Ethics and privacy 12. User-Centered Design and Development Process
Chang S. Nam is currently a Professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering at North Carolina State University (NCSU), USA. He is also an associated faculty in the UNC/NCSU Joint Department of Biomedical Engineering, Department of Psychology, and Brain Research Imaging Center (BRIC) at UNC. He received a PhD at Virginia Tech. His research interests center around brain-computer interfaces, computational neuroscience, neuroergonomics, and human-AI/Robot/Automation interaction. He is the editor of "Brain-Computer Interfaces Handbook: Technological and Theoretical Advances (with Drs. Nijholt and Lotte, CRC Press), "Neuroergonomics: Principles and Practices (Springer), "Mobile Brain-Body Imaging and the Neuroscience of Art, Innovation and Creativity (with Contreras-Vidal et al., Springer), "Trust in Human-Robot Interaction: Research and Applications (with Lyons, Elsevier), and "Human-centered AI: Research and Applications (with Jung & Lee, Elsevier). Currently, Nam serves as the Editor-in-Chief of the journal Brain-Computer Interfaces.
Joseph B. Lyons is currently a Senior Research Psychologist for the United States Air Force Research laboratory. He received his Ph.D. in Industrial/Organizational psychology with a minor in human factors from Wright State university. His primary research interests include: human-machine trust, interpersonal trust, leadership, and organizational science. Currently, Lyons serves as an Associate Editor for the journal Military Psychology, and he has served as a guest editor for IEEE Transactions on Human-Machine Systems. Formerly, he served as the Editor for The Military Psychologist.