Department of Media and Visual Arts2024-11-092019978-1-4503-5970-210.1145/3290605.33004802-s2.0-85067280049http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3290605.3300480https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14288/14544The design space of social drones, where autonomous flyers operate in close proximity to human users or bystanders, is distinct from use cases involving a remote human operator and/or an uninhabited environment; and warrants foregrounding human-centered design concerns. Recently, research on social drones has followed a trend of rapid growth. This paper consolidates the current state of the art in human-centered design knowledge about social drones through a review of relevant studies, scaffolded by a descriptive framework of design knowledge creation. Our analysis identified three high-level themes that sketch out knowledge clusters in the literature, and twelve design concerns which unpack how various dimensions of drone aesthetics and behavior relate to pertinent human responses. These results have the potential to inform and expedite future research and practice, by supporting readers in defining and situating their future contributions. The materials and results of our analysis are also published in an open online repository that intends to serve as a living hub for a community of researchers and designers working with social drones.Computer ScienceCyberneticsInformation SystemsTheory methodsThe design of social drones a review of studies on autonomous flyers in inhabited environmentsConference proceeding4744679030211481