Litcius/Paper detail

Human-Computer-Machine Interaction for the Supervision of Flexible Manufacturing Systems: A Case Study

José Daniel Hernandez, Edgar Schneider Cespedes, David Andres Gutierrez, David Sanchez-Londoño, Giacomo Barbieri, Sepideh Abolghasem, David Romero, Luca Fumagalli

2020IFAC-PapersOnLine14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Production is moving from mass-production to ‘mass-customization’ and ‘personalization’ (lot-size-one). Accordingly, modern manufacturing systems must become more agile and responsive to changing global markets and closer to customers. Industry 4.0 technologies have the premises to face these changes in the production paradigm. However, technologies must be supported by methodological approaches focused on the process to be optimized, digitalized, and made more flexible. In this paper, we propose a seamless Human-Computer-Machine Interaction (HCMI) architecture for supporting the supervision activity of the operator in the context of flexible manufacturing systems. The suggested interaction is implemented and validated using a lab case study where we demonstrate how the proposed HCMI architecture, in line with the Industry 4.0 architectural design principles, enables ‘close-to-realtime’ supervision of the manufacturing system in its self-adaptation to production changes.

Topics & Concepts

Mass customizationPersonalizationAgile manufacturingAgile software developmentArchitectureContext (archaeology)Computer scienceManufacturing engineeringAdaptation (eye)Production (economics)Process (computing)EngineeringSoftware engineeringWorld Wide WebBiologyOpticsMacroeconomicsArtOperating systemPaleontologyPhysicsVisual artsEconomicsDigital Transformation in IndustryFlexible and Reconfigurable Manufacturing SystemsManufacturing Process and Optimization