SRI Consulting Business Intelligence


Advanced Search                           
Bringing Futures into Focus
Research Programs Consulting Services What's New? About SRIC-BI Contact Us Search (Advanced)
Explorer
Robotics
Technology Analyst: Carl Telford
Phone: +44-(0)20-8256-1416
Fax: +44-(0)20-8760-0635
Explorer program logo

Viewpoints
About This Technology
  Download the Technology Map  (PDF)
View the Technology Map's Table of Contents


Viewpoints
  2008
June - Robotics: Implications of Commercialization
May - Professional Robotics: Market Analysis
April - Future Market Developments
March - Recent Developments in Advanced Humanoid Robots
February - Sarnoff Corporation: Developer of Enabling Technologies
Recent Developments: Yaskawa's Mail-Sorting Robot
 
  2007
Dec/Jan - 2007: The Year in Review
Look for These Developments in 2008
November - Reproducing the Subtleties of Human Motion
October - The Robot Is Still Dead, Long Live the Robot
Recent Developments: Demand for Agricultural Robots Is Set to Increase
September - Robots for Rehabilitation
Announcement: Explorer Technology Area Virtual Environments Becomes Virtual Worlds
August - Human Augmentation: Needs, Progress, and Opportunities
July - Advanced Interactive Robots
New Technology Area: User Interfaces
June - Your Own Humanoid
May - Robots, Standards, and MEMS
April - Recent Developments in Brain-Machine Interfaces
Opportunities for Robotics in Mining Applications
March - Robots to Build Our Houses
Recent Developments: Gains for Japanese Industrial-Robot Makers • Cyberdyne to Sell Robotic Suits
February - Robotics and Artificial Muscles: An Update
 
  1996–2006 Viewpoints archive  >>



About This Technology

Robotic systems perform physical manipulations loosely based on human abilities. The strict definition of robots requires that those manipulations be programmable, performable autonomously or by programmable teleoperation. The International Federation of Robotics classifies robots in two ways: manipulating industrial robots and others. According to the IFR, a manipulating industrial robot is an automatically controlled, reprogrammable, multipurpose, manipulative machine with three or more reprogrammable axes, which users may either fix in place or make mobile for industrial automation applications. In other than manufacturing industries, a robot is a machine that users can program to perform manipulative and in some cases locomotive tasks under automatic control. In manufacturing, robots improve quality and productivity by reducing process variance and lowering total production costs. In many applications, both manufacturing and nonmanufacturing, robots free humans from hazardous, noisy, strenuous tasks, or they operate where humans simply cannot.

More than 1 million industrial robots are in daily operation around the world (more than 40% in Japan), and the market for industrial robots has matured. In manufacturing, robots can be a core technology of flexible manufacturing or computer-integrated manufacturing. As computer processors increase in power and decrease in cost, robots will provide increasing flexibility and operate more autonomously than current robots. Such capabilities will broaden future robots' applications into such areas as medicine, personal assistance, construction, cooperating robotic teams, and many others that require sophisticated operation.

Manufacturing companies will continue to benefit from evolutionary developments in robotic systems and related technologies. Service-industry applications of robots are an emerging area, and service industries are likely to see further benefits from the technology within the next decade. Military applications will drive the development of many mobile robots. Personal robots are emerging, especially for applications such as floor cleaning. Questions remain about the range of applications for such robots: Homes have become increasingly mechanized, and robots may be an unnecessary addition to people's living environments. Researchers and large manufacturers continue to develop advanced personal robots, especially in Japan. Such robots may start to have significant impacts on people's lives in the next 15 to 20 years.



SRI Consulting Business Intelligence -- An SRI International Business Partner
Contact Us / Become a Client Korean   (Korean Inquiries) Japanese web site   (Japanese site)
Privacy Policy Sign up for SRIC-BI News, a free newsletter!
© 2001–08 by SRI Consulting Business Intelligence. All rights reserved. Unauthorized use or reproduction of all or any part of this document is prohibited. webmaster@sric-bi.com.