USE OF AI IN ROBOTICS
Artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics are a powerful combination for automating tasks inside and outside of the factory setting. In recent years, AI has become an increasingly common presence in robotic solutions, introducing flexibility and learning capabilities in previously rigid applications. While AI is still in its nascent stages, it’s been a trans-formative technology for some applications in the manufacturing sector, although there are many that have yet to feel the impact.
4
Robotic Applications that Use Artificial Intelligence:
In today’s global
manufacturing sector, there are a few main ways in which AI is deployed.
1.
Assembly:
AI is a highly useful
tool in robotic assembly applications. When combined with advanced vision
systems, AI can help with real-time course correction, which is particularly
useful in complex manufacturing sectors like aerospace. AI can also be used to
help a robot learn on its own which paths are best for certain processes while
it’s in operation.
2.
Packaging:
Robotic packaging uses
forms of AI frequently for quicker, lower cost and more accurate packaging. AI
helps save certain motions a robotic system makes, while constantly refining
them, which makes installing and moving robotic systems easy enough for anybody
to do.
3.
Customer Service:
Robots are now
being used in a customer service capacity in retail stores and hotels around
the world. Most of these robots leverage AI natural language processing
abilities to interact with customers in a more human way. Often, the more these
systems can interact with humans, the more they learn.
4.
Open Source Robotics:
A handful of robotic
systems are now being sold as open source systems with AI capability. This way,
users can teach their robots to do custom tasks based on their specific
application, such as small-scale agriculture. The convergence of open source
robotics and AI could be a huge trend in the future of AI robots.
When working together,
robots are smarter, more accurate and more profitable. AI has yet to come close
to reaching its full potential, but as it advances, so will robotics.
Signing
Out:
OCEANS WRATH
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