Start Date

6-6-2017 12:00 AM

Description

Short Abstract:

Robotics and the Internet of Things are intrinsically multi-disciplinary subjects that investigate the interaction between the physical and the cyber worlds and how they impact society. As a result, they not only demand careful consideration of digital and analog technologies, but also the human element. The “RIoT Zone” brings together disparate people and ideas to address intuitive autonomy.

Full Abstract:

Robotics and the Internet of Things are intrinsically multi-disciplinary subjects that investigate the interaction between the physical and the cyber worlds and how they impact society. As a result, they not only demand careful consideration of digital and analog technologies, but also the human element. The “RIoT Zone” brings together disparate people and ideas to address a human-centric form of intelligence we call “intuitive autonomy”. This talk will describe human/robot interaction and the programming of robots by human demonstration from the perspectives of Engineering Technology, Computer Information Technology, Industrial Engineering and Psychology.

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Jun 6th, 12:00 AM

Robotics and IoT: Interdisciplinary Applied Research in the RIoT Zone

Short Abstract:

Robotics and the Internet of Things are intrinsically multi-disciplinary subjects that investigate the interaction between the physical and the cyber worlds and how they impact society. As a result, they not only demand careful consideration of digital and analog technologies, but also the human element. The “RIoT Zone” brings together disparate people and ideas to address intuitive autonomy.

Full Abstract:

Robotics and the Internet of Things are intrinsically multi-disciplinary subjects that investigate the interaction between the physical and the cyber worlds and how they impact society. As a result, they not only demand careful consideration of digital and analog technologies, but also the human element. The “RIoT Zone” brings together disparate people and ideas to address a human-centric form of intelligence we call “intuitive autonomy”. This talk will describe human/robot interaction and the programming of robots by human demonstration from the perspectives of Engineering Technology, Computer Information Technology, Industrial Engineering and Psychology.