Human-automation collaboration in manufacturing: identifying key implementation factors

Date

2013-09-19

Authors

Charalambous, George
Fletcher, Sarah R.
Webb, Philip

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Publisher

Cranfield University Press

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Type

Conference paper

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Format

Free to read from

Citation

Charalambous G. Fletcher S. and Webb P. (2013). Human-automation collaboration in manufacturing: identifying key implementation factors. Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Manufacturing Research (ICMR2013), Cranfield University, UK, 19th – 20th September 2013, pp 301-306

Abstract

Human-automation collaboration refers to the concept of human operators and intelligent automation working together interactively within the same workspace without conventional physical separation. This concept has commanded significant attention in manufacturing because of the potential applications, such as the installation of large sub-assemblies. However, the key human factors relevant to human-automation collaboration have not yet been fully investigated. To maximise effective implementation and reduce development costs for future projects these factors need to be examined. In this paper, a collection of human factors likely to influence human-automation collaboration are identified from current literature. To test the validity of these and explore further factors associated with implementation success, different types of production processes in terms of stage of maturity are being explored via industrial case studies from the project’s stakeholders. Data was collected through a series of semi-structured interviews with shop floor operators, engineers, system designers and management personnel.

Description

Software Description

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Github

Keywords

human-automation collaboration, human-robot interaction, industrial ergonomics, human factors

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