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Thread: Miscellaneous

  1. #1

    Miscellaneous

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    Your Guide to Making Sense of Collaborative Robots

    *Cobots are collaborative robots that work safely alongside humans
    Last edited by Airicist2; 1st January 2023 at 12:23.

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    Robotic gluing in collaboration with humans - LBR iiwa @ Duerr

    Published on Mar 27, 2017

    Using KUKA LBR iiwa robots, Duerr has developed human-robot collaborative systems for final assembly processes in the automotive industry. The sensitivity and safety of the LBR iiwa enables the human worker to work directly with the robot, meaning no more safety fencing, better ergonomics, shorter walking distances, smaller cell footprints and less repetitive lifting - all while increasing the quality and output of the glue beads.

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    Multi-Robot Human Collaboration - Innovation Award 2017 Finalist Spotlight

    Published on Apr 24, 2017

    KUKA Innovation Award 2017 – Finalist Spotlight
    Multi-Robot Human Collaboration | Team MANCHU | EPFL-LASA Switzerland

    Application:
    Multiple robot arms in collaboration with a human

    Challenge:
    Manipulating large, heavy, unwieldy objects using two robots in collaboration with humans

    Solution:
    Robots move in coordination both with each other and the object being presented by a human

    Features:
    • Vision system tracks object location in space
    • Dynamic motion planning coordinates robots with object
    • Can work with wide variety of part sizes, weights and shapes
    • Robots seamlessly transition from manual guidance to automatic operation after hand-off
    • Safe motion planning through self-collision avoidance

    Institutions and Team Members:
    École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)
    Learning Algorithms and Systems Laboratory (LASA)
    Seyed Sina Mirrazavi Salehian
    Nadia Figueroa
    Prof. Aude Billard

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    New CoBots are "help on wheels" - Science Nation

    Published on Dec 12, 2013

    Meet CoBot--short for "Collaborative Robot." You might call it "help on wheels." With support from the National Science Foundation (NSF), computer scientist Manuela Veloso and her team at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) are developing CoBots, autonomous indoor service robots to interact with people and provide help "on the go."

    Getting on a CoBot's dance card is simple: log on to a website, select a task, book a time slot--and CoBot is on the job. If one CoBot is too busy, then another will carry out the request. CoBots can transport objects, deliver messages, escort people and go to places, continuously executing these tasks over multiple weeks in a multi-floor building. The robustness of the mobile robot's localization and navigation has permitted it to travel non-accompanied for hundreds of kilometers in a building.

    CoBots are able to plan their paths and smoothly navigate autonomously. They monitor the walls, calculate planar surfaces, and plot window and door locations--all while avoiding dynamic obstacles and even making notes about things like where the carpet and hardwood floor meet. Aware of their limitations, CoBots also proactively ask for help from the web or from humans for locations and for assistance with tasks that they cannot do, such as pressing elevator buttons and picking up objects to be carried. And, once a CoBot dialogs with a human requesting a task involving locations, e.g., the CORAL lab, CoBot learns the association between the language used and the location room numbers, e.g., 7412 for the CORAL lab.

    Besides Veloso, CoBots team members are: Rodrigo Ventura, professor, Instituto Superior Técnico in Lisbon; Joydeep Biswas, doctoral student, Robotics Institute; Brian Coltin, doctoral student, Robotics Institute; Tom Kollar, postdoctoral fellow, Computer Science Department; Vittorio Perera, doctoral student, Computer Science Department; Mehdi Samadi, doctoral student, Computer Science Department; and Stephanie Rosenthal, doctoral student, Computer Science Department--all at CMU--and visiting doctoral students in CMU's Computer Science Department Robin Soetens, from University of Eindhoven, the Netherlands; and Yichao Sun, from Zheijhang University, China.

    The team received advice from Illah Nourbakhsh, professor, CMU's Robotics Institute; Reid Simmons, professor, CMU's Robotics Institute; Alex Rudnicky, professor, CMU's Computer Science Department; Aaron Steinfeld, professor, CMU's Robotics Institute; and Daniele Nardi, visiting professor from University La Sapienza, Rome, Italy.

    The research in this episode was supported by NSF award #1218932, Robust Intelligence (RI): Small: Natural Language-Based Human Instruction for Task Embedded Robots, and award #1012733, Human Centered Computing (HCC): Large: SSCI-MISR: Symbiotic, Spatial, Coordinated Human-Robot Interaction for Multiple Indoor Service Robots.

    Miles O'Brien, Science Nation Correspondent
    Kate Tobin, Science Nation Producer

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    How collaborative robots are different - ft Jim Lawton at Supply Chain Insights Global Summit

    Published on May 5, 2017

    Jim Lawton, Chief Product and Marketing Officer at Rethink Robotics, provides a two minute take on the differences between smart, collaborative robots and the traditional, industrial variety that you're probably more familiar with on the factory floor.

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    How Yaskawa plans to serve the cobot industry

    Published on May 19, 2017

    At Automate 2017, Preston Summers from CobotsGuide had the chance to talk with Bernardo Mendez, Senior Project Manager at Yaskawa. Mr. Mendez discussed how cobots can solve some of today's manufacturing problems and create a safe working environment.

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    Collaborative Robots with Clara Vu from Veo | Singularity Hub

    Published on May 23, 2017

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    Collaborative robots at work

    Published on Jul 22, 2017

    Collaborative Robots At Work with Clara Vu (VEO), Jerome Dubois (6 River Systems) and Holly Yanco (UMass Lowell)

    TechCrunch Sessions: Robotics is a single-day event designed to facilitate in-depth conversation and networking with the technologists, researchers and students of the robotics community as well as the founders and investors bringing innovation to the masses.

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    Who is leading the race to deploy collaborative robots?

    Published on Jul 25, 2017

    A look at who is leading the race to deploy collaborative robots, why and what's driving this push to equip factories with the latest in advanced manufacturing technology. Featuring Jim Lawton, Rethink's Chief Product and Marketing Officer, at Supply Chain Insights Global Summit

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