WR22: We Robot 2022 University of Washington Seattle, WA, United States, September 14-16, 2022 |
Conference website | http://werobot2022.com |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=wr22 |
Abstract registration deadline | March 11, 2022 |
Submission deadline | August 8, 2022 |
We invite submissions for the 11th annual robotics law and policy conference—We Robot—to be held at the University of Washington in Seattle, Washington, on September 14-16, 2022. Currently we are planning for an in-person event.
We Robot 2022 seeks contributions by North American and international academics, practitioners, and others, in the form of scholarly papers, technological demonstrations, or posters. Hosted over the years by the law schools of Miami, Washington, Yale, Stanford, and Ottawa, We Robot fosters conversations between the people designing, building, and deploying robots and the people who shape or influence the legal and social structures in which robots will operate. Our thoroughly interdisciplinary program committee particularly encourages papers with co-authors from different fields.
Submission Guidelines
Key dates:
- Abstracts due: March 7
- Decisions: May 9
- Final papers due: August 8
Scholarly Papers
How to Propose a Paper. Papers should be submitted through the conference submission portal (link available on werobot2022.com in early January). Proposers will need to provide:
- Title of the proposed paper and an abstract of between 500 and 1000 words. Submitters are cautioned that proposals that exceed the length limit will be rejected unread. A past organizer posted some general tips and some model abstracts. In addition (not counted in the word limit) please provide a list of up to 5 key references that you refer to in the paper that will help us understand how to situate your paper in the robot law literature;
- Please do NOT put any names or biographical information in your uploaded proposal. However, on a separate sheet, please – again without your name(s) or the name(s) of institutions or corporations – list the current title of each contributor (e.g. “Ph. D candidate in Mechanical Engineering” or “Associate Professor of Anthropology” or “Chief Technologist at Robotics Startup”). We are asking for this information because in past years we have sometimes struggled to determine whether proposers had the experience or disciplinary breadth to deliver on certain types of ambitious proposals; purely blind submissions did not, for example, allow us to tell if submissions were by one person or a group.
- To preserve blind review, please do not ask members of the program or review committee to review draft abstracts in advance of submission.
We will waive conference fees for all authors of accepted papers if the full paper is submitted on time. In addition, subject to funding availability, we intend to provide for domestic air travel (or, if necessary, at least partial funding for international air travel), plus lodging, for one paper presenter provided the full paper is submitted by the due date.
Demonstrations
We invite proposals for demonstrations of interesting new robots and related technology. Unlike scholarly papers, proposals for demonstrations may be purely descriptive and designer/builders will be asked to present their work themselves. We’d like to hear about your latest innovations, what’s on the drawing board for the next generations of robots, or about legal and policy issues you have encountered in the design or deploy process. We will prioritize demos with a hardware component, so please plan to bring your own robot (BYOR) if you can.
How to pitch a demo. Demos should be submitted through the conference submission portal (link available on werobot2022.com in early January). Please include a description of what you have, or are doing, with links to any relevant photos or audio-visual information, as well as your C.V. or other relevant background. Please include a brief description of what facilities and resources your demonstration might require (e.g., power, internet connection, space).
We waive conference fees for all demonstrators.
Poster Session
We Robot’s poster session is designed to accommodate early-stage, cutting-edge, or late-breaking projects. This session is ideal for researchers to get feedback on a work in progress. At least one of the authors of each accepted poster should plan to be present at the poster during the entire poster session, and for a “lightning round” of one-minute presentations during the main session. You can bring the poster or, in some cases, with sufficient lead time we may be able to print it in Seattle for you. If accepted, you will also need to provide a web-friendly summary of the work that we can post on the conference web site.
How to propose a poster session. Poster sessions should be submitted through the conference submission portal (link available on werobot2022.com in early January). Please include an up to 500 word description of what you have or are doing, with links to any relevant photos or audio visual information, as well as your C.V. We’ll be accepting poster proposals on a rolling basis, meaning that there will be an advantage to submitting early. Remember, at least one author of an accepted poster must register for the conference to submit the final version.
We waive conference fees for all poster authors.
Committees
Program Committee
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Ryan Calo, University of Washington (Chair)
Howard J. Chizeck, University of Washington
Kate Darling, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Michael Froomkin, University of Miami
Meg Leta Jones, Georgetown University
Jason Millar, University of Ottawa
Robin Murphy, Texas A&M University
Laurel Riek, University of California San Diego
Bill Smart, Oregon State University
Kristen Thomasen, University of British Columbia
Contact
Please see conference website for further details and contact information.