Mechatronics for the design of human-oriented machines

One of the topics of mechatronics is the design of "intelligent" machines, thus making them different from previous ones and allowing more sophisticated cooperation between humans and machines. Such machines are expected to emulate human skills and to communicate and interact with their human users on an appropriate level. The requirements for such human-oriented machines and the implications on their design will be discussed here. A number of examples from actual Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) research, ranging from nanomanipulation tasks and medical devices to a mobile service robot, demonstrate the application of the concept.

[1]  Gerhard Schweitzer,et al.  User Oriented Automation of Flexible Sheet Bending , 1995 .

[2]  R. Truninger Feeling the overturn stability of a platform , 1992, [1992] Proceedings IEEE International Workshop on Robot and Human Communication.

[3]  Roland Siegwart,et al.  A robot system for automated handling in micro-world , 1995, Proceedings 1995 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems. Human Robot Interaction and Cooperative Robots.

[4]  T. Stonier Beyond Information: The Natural History Of Intelligence , 1992 .

[5]  Manfred Hiller,et al.  Design of a man-machine interface for an interactive redundant heavy manipulator , 1995 .

[6]  G Schweitzer Mechatronics—Basics, Objectives, Examples , 1996 .