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Date: 23rd May 2025, 11:00 AM (CEST)
About the speaker: Kristiina Jokinen is a senior researcher at AI Research Center of National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology in Tokyo, and Adjunct Professor at University of Helsinki. She is a member of ELLIS European AI network of excellence, Advisory Committee for AI in Engineering Program in Japan, Steering Committee for IWSDS international dialogue workshop series, and life member of Clare Hall, University of Cambridge.She has led numerous national and international research projects, most recently participating in the EU-Japan project e-VITA.
She received her first degree at University of Helsinki, and her PhD from UMIST, University of Manchester. She was awarded a JSPS Fellowship for PostDoc research at NAIST (Nara Institute of Science and Technology), and was an Invited Researcher at ATR Research Labs in Kyoto, and a Visiting Professor at Doshisha University. Her research concerns human-robot interaction, AI-based dialogue modelling and multimodal communication, and she has published widely on these topics. She developed Constructive Dialogue Model as a general framework for interaction, and with Graham Wilcock she developed the Wikipedia-based robot dialogue system WikiTalk, which won Special Recognition for Best Robot Design (Software Category) at International Conference of Social Robotics in 2017.
Abstract: In recent years, research and development on language-capable social robots have focused on new AI models to support human-robot cooperation. Besides fluent and natural communication, interaction management should integrate reliable and accurate information, and also information from the physical environment.
In this talk, I will emphasise the need for creating mutual knowledge to support cooperation between AI robots and humans. I will discuss grounding and building of shared context, and in particular, focus on knowledge graphs to model reliable and sustainable interaction.
Drawing examples from recent projects and ongoing work, I will discuss opportunities and challenges to enable development of responsible AI for natural, safe, and reliable human-robot cooperation.