IndustryWeek.com
Leadership In Manufacturing
IW Home Leadership & Strategy Operations Economics & Public Policy Technology & Innovation Rankings
Current Print Issue
Get a Free Subscription
eNewsletters
Daily News
Opinion
Web Events
In Person Events
Research
Benchmarking Tools
Associations
Archive
Manufacturing 101
Sponsored White Papers
Permissions/Reprints
Advertising Info
About IW
Contact Us
IW RSS Feeds


The Robot Evolution


MIT's Rodney A. Brooks is among researchers leading the charge to develop a smarter and more useful artificial creature.

By Jill Jusko


The manufacturing industry is no stranger to robots. Huge robot arms are commonplace in several industrial settings -- particularly automotive -- and primarily engage in long-run, repetitive tasks such as welding and assembly. They operate in splendid seclusion, with human employees urged to keep their distance from the immensely strong machines.  
 
Then there are the intelligent robots of science-fiction movies and books, such as C3PO and R2D2 from the Star Wars movies, which seem almost human in their ability to reason and feel and interact with human beings.  
 
In his latest book, "Flesh and Machines: How Robots Will Change Us" (2002, Pantheon Books), Rodney A. Brooks, director of the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, suggests that the "science fiction fantasy," as he calls it, is not so far off.  
 
"My thesis is that in just 20 years the boundary between fantasy and reality will be rent asunder," the native of Australia writes. "Just five years from now that boundary will be breached in ways that are as unimaginable to most people today as daily use of the World Wide Web was 10 years ago."  
 
The implications of that breach for manufacturing are widespread, although significant challenges remain.  
 
If anybody's predictions about the future of robotics are worth serious consideration, Brooks' are. He has dedicated his life to building intelligent robots and has a wealth of know-how to show for it.  
 
For example, Brooks, who also is the Fujitsu professor of computer science at MIT, built, along with his students, two prototypical humanoid robots called Cog and Kismet that are said to be capable of learning from experience.  
 
He is co-founder, chairman and CTO of iRobot Corp., which manufactures robots and supplies developers with an industry-standard platform to create robot applications. The Somerville, Mass.-based company has received a lot of press recently. Earlier this year it introduced consumers to Roomba, a robotic vacuum cleaner that is both self-propelled and self-navigating. In mid-September a robot dubbed the Pyramid Robot and developed by iRobot, crawled through a narrow shaft in the Great Pyramid outside of Cairo and, on live TV, drilled a hole through a door it encountered and fed through it a tiny camera, revealing yet another door.  
 
Brooks also has authored some 40 scientific articles and four books.  
 
All that he has done to date, however, has not diminished Brooks' appetite to further push the boundaries of robotic development. In his latest tome, Brooks' says that in principle there is no reason why it should not be possible to build "a machine from silicon and steel that has both genuine emotions and consciousness," given both the fact that humans have emotions and his belief that humans are machines. What may be missing are the mathematical techniques to make that leap, he surmises.  
 
But what could increasingly intelligent robots mean to manufacturing? Potentially a lot -- someday. Brooks believes there will be imperatives from manufacturers for smarter machines -- robots that take instruction easily rather than ones that require hours of programming time; robots that can help in small-batch operations rather than ones that only make financial sense in continuous or nearly continuous fixed-automation settings with long runs. More broadly, robots with social interaction skills could ultimately change the way production lines work.  
 
Over-riding, or possibly propelling, the other imperatives for intelligent robots on the plant floor will be a drive to reduce costs. Brooks points out that many firms rely on low-cost manufacturing in underdeveloped countries. Those low-cost manufacturing locations keep changing as the introduction of industry slowly raises the standard of living. "We might eventually run out of places to 'exploit,'" he says, which will give rise to calls for new low-cost solutions. (No insult to manufacturers is<











Get a free subscription  


New Online

Free IndustryWeek e-Newsletters
IndustryWeek.com offers several free daily, weekly and monthly e-mail newsletters that connect you to outstanding Web-exclusive research, articles, and major features from IndustryWeek magazine, along with information about products, conferences, and services that can improve your business.

FREE White Papers
Download FREE white papers on value chain optimization, manufacturing software, inventory management, and more. IndustryWeek's Sponsored White Paper Collection is an easy-to-use library of manufacturing documents.

Plant Benchmarking Tool
The IW Path to Excellence benchmarking tool is the easiest, most affordable way to benchmark your plant's performance and identify strategies for improvement. Pick up dozens of best practices and performance indicators from top manufacturers.

IW/MPI 2004 Benchmarking Toolkit
Based on the IW/MPI Census of Manufacturers, the 2004 Benchmarking Toolkit provides instant, online access to one of the largest databases of operations metrics and plant-level financial measurements available anywhere in the world.

Leadership & Strategy | Operations | Economics & Public Policy
Technology & Innovation | Rankings

Subscription Services | Advertising | Terms of Use | Privacy Notice | Contact Us

Penton Media
Copyright© 1998-2005 Penton Media, Inc. All rights reserved.

Techical questions or bug reports? E-mail webmaster@industryweek.com

Site Tools
eNewsletters
Get a free subscription
Related Items