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Human–robot collaboration: a fabrication framework for the sequential design and construction of unplanned spatial structures

Edvard P.G. Bruun, Ian Ting, Sigrid Adriaenssens, Stefana Parascho

Year
2020
Citations
16

Abstract

Robots in traditional fabrication applications act as passive participants in the process of creation—simply performing a set of predetermined actions to materialize a completed design. We propose a novel bottom-up design framework in which robots are instead given the opportunity to participate centrally within a creative design process. This paper describes how two 6-axis industrial robotic arms were used to cooperatively aggregate a collection of solid spherical units. The branching spatial structure being constructed is unplanned at the outset of this process, and is instead designed in pseudo-realtime during construction. This ‘design-as-you-build’ approach relies on robotic input, in the form of path-planning constraints, in tandem with human evaluation and decision-making. The resulting structure emerges from a human–robot design collaboration operating within the specified physical domain.

Keywords

RobotComputer scienceProcess (computing)Human–computer interactionSet (abstract data type)Domain (mathematical analysis)Path (computing)Design processMotion planningArtificial intelligence

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