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Most industrial robots today have little or no sensory capability.
Feedback is limited to information about joint positions, combined
with a few interlock and timing signals. These robots can function
only in an environment where the objects to be manipulated are
precisely located in the proper position for the robot to grasp (i.
e. , in a structured environment). For many present industrial
applications, this level of performance has been adequate. With the
increasing demand for high performance sensor-based robot
manipulators in assembly tasks, meeting this demand and challenge
can only be achieved through the consideration of: 1) efficient
acquisition and processing of intemaVextemal sensory information,
2) utilization and integration of sensory information from various
sensors (tactile, force, and vision) to acquire knowledge in a
changing environment, 3) exploitation of inherent robotic parallel
algorithms and efficient VLSI architectures for robotic
computations, and finally 4) system integration into a working and
functioning robotic system. This is the intent of the Workshop on
Sensor-Based Robots: Algorithms and Architectures - to study the
fundamental research issues and problems associated with
sensor-based robot manipulators and to propose approaches and
solutions from various viewpoints in improving present day robot
manipula tors in the areas of sensor fusion and integration,
sensory information processing, and parallel algorithms and
architectures for robotic computations.
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