A Self-Negotiation Framework for Ethical Decision-Making during Task Interruptions in Service Robots

June 30, 2026 ยท Grace Period ยท ๐Ÿ› the 2026 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems

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Authors Nele Reichert, Mashal Afzal Memon, Marco Autili, Nico Hochgeschwender arXiv ID 2606.31357 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Citations 0 Venue the 2026 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems
Abstract
Service robots operating in public environments frequently encounter interruptions when multiple users request service simultaneously. Resolving such conflicts requires ethical decision-making, as prioritizing one user request can disadvantage another. Current approaches rely on static rules or centralized arbitration and do not support autonomous, ethics-based conflict resolution. This paper addresses the question of how a single robot can arbitrate between multiple users during task interruptions and make ethically aligned decisions without relying on external coordination. We introduce a self-negotiation framework that represents each user by an ethical profile that captures their contextual ethical preferences and conditions, and resolves conflicts through an internal negotiation process. The framework is implemented in a modular ROS-based implementation and evaluated in simulation with a realistic interruption scenario. The results show that the system consistently produces user ethical preference-aligned outcomes, supports multilateral negotiation among users, and responds within 1.5 seconds, with near-linear runtime growth under increasing user input.
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