We know that robots are just machines. Why then do we often talk about
them as if they were alive? Laura Voss explores this fascinating
phenomenon, providing a rich insight into practices of animacy (and
inanimacy) attribution to robot technology: from science-fiction to
robotics R&D, from science communication to media discourse, and from
the theoretical perspectives of STS to the cognitive sciences. Taking an
interdisciplinary perspective, and backed by a wealth of empirical
material, Voss shows how scientists, engineers, journalists - and
everyone else - can face the challenge of robot technology appearing "a
little bit alive" with a reflexive and yet pragmatic stance.