Cooperation between humans and machines can work much better than just human or just robot teams alone, a recent study suggests.
Self-driving delivery vehicles, such as forklifts, are finding their way into many areas – and companies are reporting potential time and cost savings.
The research team simulated a process from production logistics, such as the typical supply of materials for use in the car or engineering industries.
A team of human drivers, a team of robots and a mixed team of humans and robots were assigned transport tasks using vehicles. The time they needed was measured. The results were that the mixed team of humans and robots were able to beat the other teams; this coordination of processes was most efficient and caused the least number of accidents.
This was quite unexpected, as the highest levels of efficiency are often assumed to belong to those systems that are completely automated.
The team of researchers from the various disciplines of business administration, computer science and sociology of work and industry highlighted the requirements for successful human-machine interaction. In many corporate and business situations, decisions will continue to be driven by people. (ANI)