Gesture control wearables for human-machine interaction in industry 4.0

  1. Luis Roda-Sanchez
  2. Teresa Olivares
  3. Celia Garrido-Hidalgo
  4. Antonio Fernández-Caballero
Libro:
From Bioinspired Systems and Biomedical Applications to Machine Learning: 8th International Work-Conference on the Interplay Between Natural and Artificial Computation, IWINAC 2019, Almería, Spain, June 3–7, 2019, Proceedings, Part II
  1. José Manuel Ferrández Vicente (dir. congr.)
  2. José Ramón Álvarez-Sánchez (dir. congr.)
  3. Félix de la Paz López (dir. congr.)
  4. Javier Toledo Moreo (dir. congr.)
  5. Hojjat Adeli (coord.)

Editorial: Springer Suiza

ISBN: 978-3-030-19651-6

Año de publicación: 2019

Páginas: 99-108

Tipo: Capítulo de Libro

Resumen

The deployment of Industry 4.0 will achieve great aimsregarding production rate, control, data analysis, cost, energy consumption and flexibility. However, one of the most significant aspects is the human factor. Robots, machinery and knowledge needed could lead to a social problem for those operators who are not prepared to face such big technology challenges. This could cause a technological gap resulting in a rejection or disapproval of beneficial technology. To preserve this emerging paradigm’s balance, researchers and developers must considerusing intelligent human-machine interaction capabilities before building novel industry deployments. This paper introduces a smart gesture control system that facilitates movements of a robotic arm with the aid of two wearables devices. By using this kind of control system, any worker should fit into the new paradigm where some precise, hazardous or heavy tasks incorporate robots. Furthermore, this proposal is suited to industry scenarios, since it fulfills fundamental requirements regarding success rate and real-time control as well as high flexibility and scalability, whichare key factors in Industry 4.0.