The Digital Manufacturing Industrial Summit 2023 (DMIS2023) took place in Valencia from April 25th to the 27th. The AI-PRISM team organised the “Robotics in Manufacturing” workshop at the Polytechnical University of Valencia, where our Technical Manager entity is located. The Technological Institute of Informatics (ITI) also participated in the “Manufacturing Reconfiguration and Flexibility” workshop along with other European projects.
This year, the DMIS hosted over 300 industry users, technology partners, academics, researchers, and policymakers. The summit focused on providing a platform for networking, connecting industry, technology, and research. At the event, experts in the field presented various digital manufacturing topics through workshops and booths.
During the event, the AI-PRISM project conducted a workshop titled “Robotics in Manufacturing.” NTTData Spain led the workshop, and Technical Manager Francisco Fraile, Alexander Lepschi from discrete manufacturing use case KEBA, and Wael Mohammed from partner Tampere University presented viewpoints and presentations on the topic. In addition, they were joined by experts Alessandro Liani from APICUS and Ion Baratas from Grupo Alkadin COMAR to discuss how manufacturers are exploring robotics solutions to improve efficiency and effectiveness due to global market demands.
AI-PRISM Technical Manager, Francisco Fraile, expressed: “It is relevant to underscore the importance of keeping technology human-centric, and empower workers to perform higher-value tasks. This is at the heart of Industry 5.0, which shifts the focus from efficiency and innovation to environmental sustainability and social responsability. Collaborative robotics, or ‘cobots‘, stand at the forefront of this new technological revolution. They possess the potential to create better workplaces and to help us overcome the shortage of skilled personnel that most companies are facing nowadays.“
At the “Manufacturing Reconfiguration and Flexibility” workshop, Dr. Gerardo Minella from partner ITI, had a chance to discuss how modern manufacturing is becoming more adaptable and flexible to keep up with changing market demands and consumer preferences. The session focused on key aspects expected to modernise manufacturing production lines in the coming years, including modularity, adaptability, licensing, connectivity, and responsiveness.
Maintaining a continuous production adaptation mindset was emphasised during this discussion with sister projects Penelope, DIMOFAC, AIDEAS, and SINTEF. This mindset has proven relevant during the COVID-19 pandemic, but the question about how it can be sustained long-term remains.
Dr. Minella, senior information systems engineer and researcher and coordinator of the SOA group research line in ITI, affirmed: “It was encouraging to see how fellow researchers from different parts of Europe, with very different visions, using different technologies, with sometimes even opposing approaches, are focusing their efforts on making the European enterprise more competitive, flexible and adaptable to the changing situations we experience nowadays.”
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