Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Agile Robotics for Industrial Automation Competition

ARIAC

We are proud to announce the first ever Agile Robotics for Industrial Automation Competition (ARIAC). The competition is a joint effort between the IEEE Conference on Automation Science and Engineering (CASE) and NIST's Intelligent Systems Division. We are in the process of planning this simulation-based competition which is designed to promote robot agility by utilizing the latest advances in artificial intelligence and robot planning. We invite you to become a part of the planning of this first ever competition. Involvement may include but is not limited to:

  1. Competition Information Dissemination: Helping to convey competition information and announcements to a broad audience.
  2. Potential Participant: Participating as a team in the competition.
  3. State of the Art Adviser: Sharing expertise about what is common in industry and where technology is headed.
  4. Technology Transfer Adviser: Providing advice to ensure that the competition results are useful and make it into the hands of industry.

Agility
A core focus on this competition is to test the agility of industrial robot systems, with the goal of enabling industrial robots on your shop floors to be more productive, more autonomous, and to require less time from shop floor workers. In this context, we define agility broadly to address:
  • Failure identification and recovery, where robot can detect failures in a manufacturing process and automatically recover from those failures
  • Automated planning, to minimize (or eliminate) the up-front robot programming time
    when a new product is introduced
  • Fixtureless environment, where robots can sense the environment and perform tasks
    on parts that are not in predefined locations
  • Plug and play robots, where robots from different manufacturers can be swapped in an
    out without the need for reprogramming

Competition participants will be using the latest advances in artificial intelligence and robot planning and control to tackle these challenges, which will then be released in the public domain for you to evaluate on your shop floor. We want to ensure that the challenges that they address are truly representative of the challenges you are facing in your company. As such, we ask for your input in helping to define these challenges.

Measurement Science Challenge

Develop performance metrics, information models, test methods, and protocols to enable manufacturers to assess and assure the agility performance of their robot systems 

Potential Impact 

  • Lot size 1 assembly in automated lines
  • Reduced line down time due to programming
  • Less human intervention required due to assembly errors

Major Outcomes

  • Metrics and test methods to measure robot agility
  • A robot description model allowing robot vendors and manufacturers to clearly and accurately characterize their robots
  • Methods, protocols, and information models to allow for dynamic tasking/re-tasking
  • An integrated agility framework enabling manufacturers to assess and assure the agility performance of one or many robots

Co-Sponsors

Siemens Logo

 

 

Dassault Systems Logo


 

 

ABB Logo

 

 

Competition Staff

Craig Schlenoff
craig.schlenoff [at] nist.gov (craig[dot]schlenoff[at]nist[dot]gov)

william.harrison [at] nist.gov (William Harrison)
william.harrison [at] nist.gov (william[dot]harrison[at]nist[dot]gov)

Tony Downs
anthony.downs [at] nist.gov (anthony[dot]downs[at]nist[dot]gov)

100 Bureau Drive, M/S 8230
Gaithersburg, MD 20899-8230

Subscribe to our mailing list

Please send an e-mail to william.harrison [at] nist.gov (william[dot]harrison[at]nist[dot]gov)  with the following information:

Name, affiliation, e-mail address and area of interest.

Areas of interest: State of the Art Adviser, Technology Transfer Adviser, Contest Information Dissemination, Potential Participant, General Information

Created December 7, 2015, Updated September 12, 2016