Robotic systems continue to grow as essential tools in strengthening U.S. manufacturing competitiveness by enabling dramatically greater responsiveness and innovation. The criticality of robotics and related automation to the U.S. economy has increased in the past several years due to labor shortages, spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic and retirements in an aging U.S. workforce. Although certain core technologies underpinning advanced robotics capabilities have made strides in the past few years, adoption challenges persist, and new ones have emerged. Ensuring that robots are adaptable, easily tasked, can partner safely with humans, and can be quickly integrated into a manufacturing enterprise continues to be essential. Emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence, advanced sensors, and more dexterous manipulators hold great promise to expand and accelerate the adoption of robotics. However, this promise cannot be fulfilled without rigorous validations and characterizations of these technologies to ensure that they meet the applications and environments for which they are intended. The Measurement Science for Manufacturing Robotics program will provide the underpinnings needed to enable all manufacturers, including small and medium ones, to characterize and understand the performance of robotic systems within their enterprises. Measurement science establishes a common language for expressing performance requirements and provides means of verifying that systems meet those requirements. Tangible performance targets also direct innovations toward addressing existing capability gaps in robotic systems. NIST will deliver performance metrics, information models, data sets, test methods, and protocols to assess and assure the key attributes of robotic systems necessary to enable enterprises of all sizes to achieve flexible and dynamic production.
NIST Robotics Wares: What You Can Use or Get Involved With Now
NIST NRC PostDoc Opportunity “Measurement Science for Manufacturing Robotic Systems”
Provide your Robotics Measurement Science and Standards Needs
Objective
To develop and deploy measurement science that advances manufacturing robotic system performance, collaboration, agility, autonomy, safety, and ease of implementation to enhance U.S. innovation and industrial competitiveness.
Technical Idea
The fundamental idea is to provide the measurement science needed to ensure that robotic systems can be confidently applied to advanced manufacturing operations.
As robots are systems of systems, to perform their assigned tasks, robots must perceive the world and their current state through a combination of sensors and algorithms. They must plan and adapt their actions based on their estimate of the current situation, and execute the plans using locomotion, grasping, and other actuation. They must also do this while interacting with humans and other robots and equipment through a variety of modalities. Artificial intelligence algorithms and data may support any of these systems. Robotic system performance is a composite of how well the components perform individually and as an integrated system. Measurement science must be developed for the individual components as well as for the overall composite systems.
Seven principal facets of robotic systems will be investigated through a holistic approach based on a unified set of testbeds and scenarios in consultation with industry. The capability-oriented research projects will be strengthened by a complementary effort identifying the technical barriers that prevent small and medium manufacturers from adopting robots, while serving as a conduit to the overall Program. Underlying this approach is a process that uses application requirements to drive development of metrics. Following this process provides performance results that are expressed contextually, rather than as abstract quantities or qualities that may not be relevant to intended implementations.
The research is organized based on the core technical areas that underly manufacturing robotic systems. NIST will tackle new challenges within these technical areas, based on the highest priority needs identified by industry, to develop measurement science for characterizing and verifying the:
Research Plan
The research plan’s thrusts outlined above are addressed in the following eight projects which share the Program’s testbeds and jointly work with industry to define relevant scenarios to drive the research. The areas below will advance understanding of the various component areas, based on technological and commercialization progress anticipated in the coming years.
Major Recent Accomplishments
Standards
Roadmaps
Competitions
Testbeds
Patents
Datasets