首页|New Machine Learning Study Results Reported from University of Manchester (Human-robot Collaboration and Machine Learning: a Systematic Review of Recent Research)
New Machine Learning Study Results Reported from University of Manchester (Human-robot Collaboration and Machine Learning: a Systematic Review of Recent Research)
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Data detailed on Machine Learning have been presented. According to news reporting from Manchester, United Kingdom, by NewsRx journalists, research stated, “Technological progress increasingly envisions the use of robots interacting with people in everyday life. Human-robot collaboration (HRC) is the approach that explores the interaction between a human and a robot, during the completion of a common objective, at the cognitive and physical level.” Funders for this research include EPSRC CASE studentship - BAE Systems, H2020 project TRAINCREASE, H2020 project eLADDA, UK Research & Innovation (UKRI), US Air Force project THRIVE++. The news correspondents obtained a quote from the research from the University of Manchester, “In HRC works, a cognitive model is typically built, which collects inputs from the environment and from the user, elaborates and translates these into information that can be used by the robot itself. Machine learning is a recent approach to build the cognitive model and behavioural block, with high potential in HRC. Consequently, this paper proposes a thorough literature review of the use of machine learning techniques in the context of human-robot collaboration. 45 key papers were selected and analysed, and a clustering of works based on the type of collaborative tasks, evaluation metrics and cognitive variables modelled is proposed. Then, a deep analysis on different families of machine learning algorithms and their properties, along with the sensing modalities used, is carried out. Among the observations, it is outlined the importance of the machine learning algorithms to incorporate time dependencies.”
ManchesterUnited KingdomEuropeCyborgsEmerging TechnologiesMachine LearningRobotRoboticsUniversity of Manchester