This handbook provides a comprehensive grounding of the history, methods, debates and theories that contribute to the study of human-machine communication.
Front Cover.
Half Title Page.
Title Page.
Copyright Page.
Photo Credits.
Dedication.
Contents.
Notes on the Editors and Contributors.
Human–Machine Communication, Humacomm, and Origins: A Foreword by Steve Mann, 2022.
Acknowledgements.
Introduction to the Handbook.
1: Histories and Trajectories.
2: Machines are Us: An Excursion in the History of HMC.
3: The Interdisciplinarity of HMC: Rethinking Communication, Media, and Agency.
4: Cybernetics and Information Theory in Human–Machine Communication.
5: Cyborgs and Human–Machine Communication Configurations.
6: The Meaning and Agency of Twenty-First-Century AI.
7: The History and Future of Human–Robot Communication.
8: From CASA to TIME: Machine as a Source of Media Effects.
9: Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) and Human–Machine Communication (HMC).
10: HMC and HCI: Cognates on a Journey.
11: Developing a Theory of Artificial Minds (ToAM) to Facilitate Meaningful Human–AI Communication.
12: HMC and Theories of Human–Technology Relations.
13: Philosophical Contexts and Consequences of Human–Machine Communication.
14: Critical and Cultural Approaches to Human–Machine Communication.
15: Gender and Identity in Human–Machine Communication.
16: Literature and HMC: Poetry and/as the Machine.
17: Human–Machine Communities: How Online Computer Games Model the Future.
18: Perfect Incommunicability: War and the Strategic Paradox of Human–Machine Communication.
19: Approaches and Methods.
20: Human–Robot Interaction.
21: Auditing Human–Machine Communication Systems Using Simulated Humans.
22: Experiments in Human–Machine Communication Research.
23: Detecting the States of our Minds: Developments in Physiological and Cognitive Measures.
24: Human Shoppers, AI Cashiers, and Cloud-computing Others: Methodological Approaches for Machine Surveillance in Commercial Retail Environments.