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Information technology --- Human-computer interaction --- Emotions. --- Identity (Psychology) --- Technologie de l'information --- Interaction homme-machine (Informatique) --- Emotions --- Identité (Psychologie) --- Psychological aspects. --- Aspect psychologique --- Telematics --- #SBIB:309H103 --- #SBIB:309H505 --- CMC systems --- Computer-mediated communication --- Telecommunication --- Cyberspace --- IT (Information technology) --- Technology --- Information superhighway --- Knowledge management --- Personal identity --- Personality --- Self --- Ego (Psychology) --- Individuality --- Computer-human interaction --- Human factors in computing systems --- Interaction, Human-computer --- Human engineering --- User-centered system design --- User interfaces (Computer systems) --- Feelings --- Human emotions --- Passions --- Psychology --- Affect (Psychology) --- Affective neuroscience --- Apathy --- Pathognomy --- Psychological aspects --- Mediatechnologie / ICT / digitale media: sociale en culturele aspecten --- Code en boodschap: psychologische, psycho-analytische benadering
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Technological advancements in the West since the last millennium have contributed to global modernity. Technologies set conditions for the closeness of the nation-states and for the affinity of the global and the local. They are also penetrating everyday life, and even sometimes the body, producing radical social changes. Yet, arguing that new technologies bring a new life and a promising future to global societies remains a questionable thesis. This book attempts to explore the relationship between new technologies and global societies, to gain an understanding of how the positive as well a
Technological innovations. --- Technology. --- Globalization. --- Global cities --- Globalisation --- Internationalization --- International relations --- Anti-globalization movement --- Breakthroughs, Technological --- Innovations, Industrial --- Innovations, Technological --- Technical innovations --- Technological breakthroughs --- Technological change --- Creative ability in technology --- Inventions --- Domestication of technology --- Innovation relay centers --- Research, Industrial --- Technology transfer --- Applied science --- Arts, Useful --- Science, Applied --- Useful arts --- Science --- Industrial arts --- Material culture --- Globalization --- Technological innovations --- Technology --- #SBIB:309H103 --- Mediatechnologie / ICT / digitale media: sociale en culturele aspecten
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Human body --- Human figure in art. --- Human-computer interaction. --- Communication and technology. --- Mass media and technology. --- Technology and civilization. --- Corps humain --- Corps humain dans l'art --- Interaction homme-machine (Informatique) --- Communication et technologie --- Médias et technologie --- Technologie et civilisation --- Social aspects --- Aspect social --- Body, Human --- Human beings --- Human figure in art --- Human-computer interaction --- Technology and civilization --- Advertising
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Ce livre est une hérésie qui manie les catégories marxiennes sans dogmatisme en utilisant les armes de la critique féministe. Il propose un examen systématique explorant les rapports réels que le capital entretient en secret avec les pourvoyeuses de soins, de sourires et de sexe. Fortunati fait apparaître dans toute sa complexité le processus de (re)production de la marchandise force de travail qui est en jeu derrière la subordination des femmes. Le monde de la reproduction s'impose comme un lieu bombardé par mille comportements de rébellion, comme le rejet de la maternité, du mariage ou de l'hétérosexualité. L'attention portée ici à la crise de la famille sous l'impact de la restructuration et des luttes est à la fois une archéologie du présent et un atout pour penser un changement de cap féministe révolutionnaire. Fortunati appuie la lutte contre le travail, à partir du travail domestique et du travail du sexe, pour la destruction définitive du travail.
Capitalisme --- Travail domestique. --- Prostitution --- Analyse marxiste. --- Women and socialism --- Capitalism --- Production (Economic theory) --- Marxian economics
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Information society --- Social networks --- Broadband communication systems --- Mobile communication systems
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Addressing several issues that explore the human side of social robots, this book asks from a social and human scientific perspective what a social robot is and how we might come to think about social robots in the different areas of everyday life. Organized around three sections that deal with Perceptions and Attitudes to Social Robots, Human Interaction with Social Robots, and Social Robots in Everyday Life, the book explores the idea that even if technical problems related to robot technologies can be continuously solved from a machine perspective, what kind of machine do we want to have and use in our daily lives? Experiences from previously widely adopted technologies, such smartphones, hint that robot technologies could potentially be absorbed into the everyday lives of humans in such a way that it is the human that determines the human-machine interaction. In a similar way to how today’s information and communication technologies were first designed for professional/industrial use, but which soon were commercialised for the mass market and then personalised by humans in the daily practices of use, the use of social robots is now facing the same revolution of ‘domestication’. In this transformation, which involves the profound embedding of robots in the everyday life, the ‘human’ aspect of a social robot will have a key role to play. This book casts light on this burning issue, which is one of the central topics that will be taught and studied in universities worldwide and that will be discussed widely, publicly and repeatedly in the near future. The book makes a comprehensive overview of the human dimension of social robots by discussing both transnational features and national specificities.
Social sciences --- Robotics and Automation. --- Communication Studies. --- Computer Appl. in Social and Behavioral Sciences. --- Data processing. --- Robotics. --- Automation. --- Communication. --- Application software. --- Application computer programs --- Application computer software --- Applications software --- Apps (Computer software) --- Computer software --- Communication, Primitive --- Mass communication --- Sociology --- Automatic factories --- Automatic production --- Computer control --- Engineering cybernetics --- Factories --- Industrial engineering --- Mechanization --- Assembly-line methods --- Automatic control --- Automatic machinery --- CAD/CAM systems --- Robotics --- Automation --- Machine theory
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Addressing several issues that explore the human side of social robots, this book asks from a social and human scientific perspective what a social robot is and how we might come to think about social robots in the different areas of everyday life. Organized around three sections that deal with Perceptions and Attitudes to Social Robots, Human Interaction with Social Robots, and Social Robots in Everyday Life, the book explores the idea that even if technical problems related to robot technologies can be continuously solved from a machine perspective, what kind of machine do we want to have and use in our daily lives? Experiences from previously widely adopted technologies, such smartphones, hint that robot technologies could potentially be absorbed into the everyday lives of humans in such a way that it is the human that determines the human-machine interaction. In a similar way to how today’s information and communication technologies were first designed for professional/industrial use, but which soon were commercialised for the mass market and then personalised by humans in the daily practices of use, the use of social robots is now facing the same revolution of ‘domestication’. In this transformation, which involves the profound embedding of robots in the everyday life, the ‘human’ aspect of a social robot will have a key role to play. This book casts light on this burning issue, which is one of the central topics that will be taught and studied in universities worldwide and that will be discussed widely, publicly and repeatedly in the near future. The book makes a comprehensive overview of the human dimension of social robots by discussing both transnational features and national specificities.
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