What changed for the Professional Service Robotics Industry

What changed for the Professional Service Robotics Industry

Service robots assist people by typically doing dirty, boring, remote, dangerous, or repetitive work, including household chores. They are usually autonomous and / or operated by an integrated control system with manual override options. The term "service robot" does not have a strict technical definition.

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Some of the key players of Professional Service Robotics Industry:

Dassault Aviation, Israel Aerospace, AeroVironment, European Aeronautic Defence and Space, Advanced Robotics, BlueBotics, MacDonald Dettwiler Space, Von Hoerner & Sulger, Universal Robots

The International Organization for Standardization defines a “service robot” as a robot “that performs useful tasks for people or devices without industrial automation applications”. According to ISO 8373, robots require a certain degree of autonomy, that is, the ability to perform intended tasks based on the current state and the detection without human intervention. For service robots, this ranges from partial autonomy - including human-robot interaction - to full autonomy - without active intervention by human robots.

The IFR (International Federation of Robotics) statistics for service robots therefore include systems based on some degree of interaction between human robots or even complete tele-operation, as well as fully autonomous systems. Service robots are categorized according to personal or professional use. They have many shapes and structures as well as areas of application.

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