<p>Most industrial robots today have little or no sensory capability. Feedback is limited to information about joint positions, combined with a few interlock and timing signals. These robots can function only in an environment where the objects to be manipulated are precisely located in the proper p
Computer Vision and Sensor-Based Robots
β Scribed by C. A. Rosen (auth.), George G. Dodd, Lothar Rossol (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1979
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 351
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The goal ofthe symposium, "Computer Vision and Sensor-Based Robots," held at the General Motors Research Laboratories on September 2S and 26, 1978, was to stimulate a closer interaction between people working in diverse areas and to discuss fundamental issues related to vision and robotics. This book contains the papers and general discussions of that symposium, the 22nd in an annual series covering different technical disciplines that are timely and of interest to General Motors as well as the technical community at large. The subject of this symposium remains timely because the cost of computer vision hardware continues to drop and there is increasing use of robots in manufacturing applications. Current industrial applications of computer vision range from simple systems that measure or compare to sophisticated systems for part location determination and inspection. Almost all industrial robots today work with known parts in known posiΒ tions, and we are just now beginning to see the emergence of programmable automaΒ tion in which the robot can react to its environment when stimulated by visual and force-touch sensor inputs. As discussed in the symposium, future advances will depend largely on research now underway in several key areas. Development of vision systems that can meet industrial speed and resolution requirements with a sense of depth and color is a necessary step.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-ix
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Machine Vision and Robotics: Industrial Requirements....Pages 3-22
Human and Robot Task Performance....Pages 23-50
Mechanisms of Perception....Pages 51-68
Artificial Intelligence and the Science of Image Understanding....Pages 69-77
Front Matter....Pages 79-79
CONSIGHT-I: A Vision-Controlled Robot System for Transferring Parts from Belt Conveyors....Pages 81-100
An Industrial Eye that Recognizes hole Positions in a Water Pump Testing Process....Pages 101-116
APAS: Adaptable Programmable Assembly System....Pages 117-140
PUMA: Programmable Universal Machine for Assembly....Pages 141-152
Programmable Assembly System....Pages 153-166
Front Matter....Pages 167-167
Computer Architectures for Vision....Pages 169-186
Three-Dimensional Computer Vision....Pages 187-205
Optical Computing for Image Processing....Pages 207-237
Prospects for Industrial Vision....Pages 239-259
Front Matter....Pages 261-261
Stand-Alone Vs. Distributed Robotics....Pages 263-273
Robot Assembly Research and Its Future Applications....Pages 275-321
Future Prospects for Sensor-Based Robots....Pages 323-334
Back Matter....Pages 335-353
β¦ Subjects
Robotics and Automation; Computer Imaging, Vision, Pattern Recognition and Graphics
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>This volume contains papers presented at the NATO Advanced Research Workshop (ARW) on "Sensors and Sensory Systems for Advanced Robots", which was held in Maratea, Italy, during the week Apri I 28 - May 3, 1986. Participants in the ARW, who came from eleven NATO and two non-NATO countries, repres
<span>Industrial robots carry out simple tasks in customized environments for which it is typical that nearly all e?ector movements can be planned during an - line phase. A continual control based on sensory feedback is at most necessary at e?ector positions near target locations utilizing torque or