Cobot

A cobot[1] or co-robot[2] (from collaborative robot) is a robot intended to physically interact with humans in a shared workspace.[3] This is in contrast with other robots, designed to operate autonomously or with limited guidance,[4] which is what most industrial robots were up until the decade of the 2010s.

Cobots were invented in 1996 by J. Edward Colgate and Michael Peshkin,[5] professors at Northwestern University. A 1997 US patent filing[6] describes cobots as "an apparatus and method for direct physical interaction between a person and a general purpose manipulator controlled by a computer."

Cobots resulted from a 1995 General Motors Foundation research grant which had the goal of finding a way to make robots or robot-like equipment safe enough to team with people.[7] The first cobots assured human safety by having no internal source of motive power. Instead, motive power was provided by the human worker.[8] The cobot's function was to allow computer control of motion, by redirecting or steering a payload, in a cooperative way with the human worker. Later cobots provided limited amounts of motive power as well.[9]

The term Intelligent Assist Device (IAD) has been used as an alternative to cobot, especially in the context of industrial material handling and automotive assembly operations.[10] A draft safety standard for Intelligent Assist Devices was published in 2002.[11] An updated safety standard was published in 2016.[12]

Cobotics[13] released several cobot models in 2002.[14] [15]

Universal Robots released its first cobot, the UR5, in 2008.[16] In 2012 the UR10 cobot[17] was released, and later a table top cobot, UR3, in 2015. KUKA's LBR iiwa [18] was the result of a long collaboration with the German Aerospace Center institute.[19] Rethink Robotics released an industrial cobot, Baxter, in 2012.[20]

Cobots can have many roles — from autonomous robots capable of working together with humans in an office environment that can ask you for help,[21] to industrial robots having their protective guards removed as they can react to a human presence under EN ISO 10218 or RSA BSR/T15.1.[22]

References

  1. "The Words of Tomorrow" Wall Street Journal, January 1, 2000
  2. "National Robotics Initiative" National Science Foundation, 2012
  3. "Cobots: Robots for collaboration with human operators"
  4. "I, Cobot: Future collaboration of man and machine" The Manufacturer (2015-11-15). Retrieved on 2016-01-19
  5. "Mechanical Advantage" Chicago Tribune, Dec. 11, 1996.
  6. "Cobots" US Patent 5,952,796
  7. "Here Come the Cobots!" Industry Week, Dec. 21, 2004
  8. "Cobot architecture" IEEE Transactions on Robotics and Automation, Vol 17. Iss. 4, 2001
  9. "A History of Collaborative Robots: From Intelligent Lift Assists to Cobots" Engineering.com, October 28, 2016
  10. "Cobots for the automobile assembly line" International Conference on Robotics and Automation, Detroit, MI, 1999, pp. 728-733
  11. "Draft Standard for Intelligent Assist Devices — Personnel Safety Requirements"
  12. "ISO/TS 15066:2016 Robots and robotic devices -- Collaborative robots"
  13. "Stanley moves into materials handling with Cobotics acquisition" Cranes Today, April 2, 2003
  14. "Intelligent Assist Devices: Revolutionary Technology for Material Handling"
  15. "A History of Collaborative Robots: From Intelligent Lift Assists to Cobots" Engineering.com, October 28, 2016
  16. "A Brief History of Collaborative Robots" Engineering.com, May 19, 2016
  17. "UR10 cobot"
  18. "LBR iiwa"
  19. "DLR Light-Weight Robot III"
  20. "Baxter Kinematic Modeling, Validation and Reconfigurable Representation" SAE Technical Paper 2016-01-0334, 2016
  21. "CoBot Robots". Carnegie Mellon University. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  22. "Collaborative robots (COBOTS): Safe co-operation between human beings and robots". Retrieved 24 January 2016.

See also

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