Abstract

In the contemporary robotizing knowledge economy, robots take increasing responsibility for accomplishing knowledge-related tasks that so far have been in the human domain. This profoundly changes the knowledge-creation processes that are at the core of the knowledge economy. Knowledge creation is an interactive spatial process through which ideas are transformed into new and justified outcomes, such as novel knowledge and innovations. However, knowledge-creation processes have rarely been studied in the context of human–robot co-creation. In this article, we take the perspective of key actors who create the future of robotics, namely, robotics-related students and researchers. Their thoughts and actions construct the knowledge co-creation processes that emerge between humans and robots. We ask whether robots can have and create knowledge, what kind of knowledge, and what kind of spatialities connect to interactive human–robot knowledge-creation processes. The article’s empirical material consists of interviews with 34 robotics-related researchers and students at universities in Finland and Singapore as well as observations of human–robot interactions there. Robots and humans form top-down systems, interactive syntheses, and integrated symbioses in spatial knowledge co-creation processes. Most interviewees considered that robots can have knowledge. Some perceived robots as machines and passive agents with rational knowledge created in hierarchical systems. Others saw robots as active actors and learning co-workers having constructionist knowledge created in syntheses. Symbioses integrated humans and robots and allowed robots and human–robot cyborgs access to embodied knowledge.

Highlights

  • Robotization is sweeping globally through the knowledge economy, appearing in an increasing number of industries and across various cultures and places (Bauer, 2017; Bissell & Del Casino, 2017)

  • The generation of robot engineers—university robotics students and researchers—are at the forefront of creating the future of robotics, human–robot knowledge-creation processes, and the robotizing knowledge economy. They approach this with their perspectives on knowledge, on different understandings of robots as knowledgeable actors, and varied human–robot relationships in spatial knowledge-creation processes

  • We investigated these perspectives in this article through robotics university students and researchers in Finland and Singapore

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Summary

Introduction

Robotization is sweeping globally through the knowledge economy, appearing in an increasing number of industries and across various cultures and places (Bauer, 2017; Bissell & Del Casino, 2017). Robots are both material and social, and shape society as people and society shape robots (Šabanović, 2010). Many robots are involved in standardized and repetitive mechanical actions. Some perform complex tasks independently and in interaction with humans in the constitutive entanglement of social and material in everyday lives (Orlikowski, 2007). A core example in the robotizing knowledge economy is knowledge-creation processes. There, ideas are transformed into new, valuable, justified, and trustworthy outcomes, such as novel knowledge and innovative products and services

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