Automation: Automation Is The Use of Control Systems
Automation: Automation Is The Use of Control Systems
Automation: Automation Is The Use of Control Systems
Automation
Automation is the use of control systems
and information technologies reducing the
need for human intervention.[1] In the scope
of industrialization, automation is a step
beyond mechanization. Whereas
mechanization provided human operators
with machinery to assist them with the
muscular requirements of work, automation
greatly reduces the need for human sensory
and mental requirements as well.
Automation plays an increasingly important
role in the world economy and in daily
experience.
A series of articles on
Automation
Robotics • Cybernetics
Trade-shows
ASP-DAC (Asia-Pacific) • DAC
DATE (Europe) • ICCAD
Awards
IEEE Robotics and Automation Award
Robots
Industrial robot
Autonomous research robot
Domestic robot
Home Automation
Laboratory automation
Integrated library system
Database administration and
automation
Building automation
Automation 2
Artificial intelligence
Automated attendant
Automated guided vehicle
Automated highway system
Automated pool cleaner
Automated teller machine
Automatic painting (robotic)
Pop music automation
Robotic lawn mower
Telephone switchboard
Social movements
Technocracy movement
Venus Project • Zeitgeist Movement
Impact
Automation has had a notable impact in a wide range of highly visible industries beyond manufacturing.
Once-ubiquitous telephone operators have been replaced largely by automated telephone switchboards and
answering machines. Medical processes such as primary screening in electrocardiography or radiography and
laboratory analysis of human genes, sera, cells, and tissues are carried out at much greater speed and accuracy by
automated systems. Automated teller machines have reduced the need for bank visits to obtain cash and carry out
transactions. In general, automation has been responsible for the shift in the world economy from agrarian to
industrial in the 19th century and from industrial to services in the 20th century.[2]
Automation is now often applied primarily to increase quality in the manufacturing process, where automation can
increase quality substantially. For example, automobile and truck pistons used to be installed into engines manually.
This is rapidly being transitioned to automated machine installation, because the error rate for manual installment
was around 1-1.5%, but has been reduced to 0.00001% with automation.
Automation tools
Engineers now can have numerical control over automated devices. The result has been a rapidly expanding range of
applications and human activities. Computer-aided technologies (or CAx) now serve the basis for mathematical and
organizational tools used to create complex systems. Notable examples of CAx include Computer-aided design
(CAD software) and Computer-aided manufacturing (CAM software). The improved the design, analysis, and
manufacture of products enabled by CAx has been beneficial for industry.[5]
Information technology, together with industrial machinery and processes, can assist in the design, implementation,
and monitoring of control systems. One example of an industrial control system is a programmable logic controller
(PLC). PLCs are specialized hardened computers which are frequently used to synchronize the flow of inputs from
(physical) sensors and events with the flow of outputs to actuators and events.[1]
Human-machine interfaces (HMI) or computer human interfaces (CHI), formerly known as man-machine interfaces,
are usually employed to communicate with PLCs and other computers. Service personnel who monitor and control
through HMIs can be called by different names. In industrial process and manufacturing environments, they are
called operators or something similar. In boiler houses and central utilities departments they are called stationary
engineers.[6]
Different types of automation tools exist:
• ANN - Artificial neural network
• DCS - Distributed Control System
• HMI - Human Machine Interface
Automation 5
Current limits
Many roles for humans in industrial processes presently lie beyond the scope of automation. Human-level pattern
recognition, language recognition, and language production ability are well beyond the capabilities of modern
mechanical and computer systems. Tasks requiring subjective assessment or synthesis of complex sensory data, such
as scents and sounds, as well as high-level tasks such as strategic planning, currently require human expertise. In
many cases, the use of humans is more cost-effective than mechanical approaches even where automation of
industrial tasks is possible.
Applications of Automation
• Automated Video surveillance:
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) started the research and development of automated
Visual surveillance and Monitoring (VSAM) program 1997-99 and airborne Video Surveillance (AVS) program
1998-2002. Currently there is a major effort underway in the vision community to develop a fully automated
tracking surveillance system. Automated video surveillance monitors people and vehicle in real time within a busy
environment. Existing automated surveillance systems are based on the environment they are primarily designed to
observe, i.e., indoor, outdoor or airborne, the amount of sensors that the automated system can handle and the
mobility of sensor, i.e., stationary camera vs. mobile camera. The purpose of a surveillance system is to record
properties and trajectories of objects in a given area, generate warnings or notify designated authority in case of
occurrence of particular events.[7]
• Automated Highway Systems:
As demands for safety and mobility have grown and technological possibilities have multiplied, interest in
automation have grown. Seeking to accelerate the development and introduction of fully automated vehicles and
highways, The United States Congress authorized more than $650 million over 6 years for intelligent transport
systems (ITS) and demonstration projects in the 1991 Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA).
Congress legislated in ISTEA that “The secretary [of transportation] shall develop an automated highway and vehicle
prototype from which future fully automated intelligent vehicle-highway systems can be developed. Such
development shall include research in human factors to ensure the success of the man-machine relationship. The goal
of this program is to have the first fully automated highway roadway or an automated test track in operation by 1997.
This system shall accommodate installation of equipment in new and existing motor vehicles." [ISTEA 1991, part B,
Section 6054(b)].
Full automation commonly defined as requiring no control or very limited control by the driver; such automation
would be accomplished through a combination of sensor, computer, and communications systems in vehicles and
along the roadway. Fully automated driving would, in theory, allow closer vehicle spacing and higher speeds, which
could enhance traffic capacity in places where additional road building is physically impossible, politically
unacceptable, or prohibitively expensive. Automated controls also might enhance road safety by reducing the
opportunity for driver error, which causes a large share of motor vehicle crashes. Other potential benefits include
improved air quality (as a result of more-efficient traffic flows), increased fuel economy, and spin-off technologies
generated during research and development related to automated highway systems.[8]
Automation 6
• Automated manufacturing:
Automated manufacturing refers to the application of automation to produce things in the factory way. Most of the
advantages of the automation technology has its influence in the manufacture processes.
The main advantage of the automated manufacturing are: higher consistency and quality, reduce the lead times,
simplification of production, reduce handling, improve work flow and increase the morale of workers when a good
implementation of the automation is made.
• Home Automation
Home automation (also called domotics) designates an emerging practice of increased automation of household
appliances and features in residential dwellings, particularly through electronic means that allow for things
impracticable, overly expensive or simply not possible in recent past decades.
See also
• Outline of automation
• Artificial intelligence
• Laboratory automation
• BELBIC
• Controller
• Conveyor
• Conveyor belt
• Cybernetics
• Hardware architect
• Hardware architecture
• Industrial engineering
• Machine to Machine
• Mechanization
• Mobile manipulator
• OLE for process control
• OPC Foundation
• Process control
• Retraining
• Run Book Automation (RBA)
• Robot
• Support automation
• Systems architect
• Systems architecture
• Odo J. Struger
• EnOcean
• Vacuum tube
• Stepper motor
Automation 7
Further reading
• Jeremy Rifkin: The End of Work: The Decline of the Global Labor Force and the Dawn of the Post-Market Era
• Ramin Ramtin: Capitalism and Automation - Revolution in Technology and Capitalist Breakdown. Pluto Press,
London, Concord Mass. 1991
• Vernon L. Trevathan A Guide to the Automation Body of Knowledge, 2nd Edition ISA Publications [9]
• Ouellette, Robert. Automation impacts on industry. Ann Arbor Science Publishers, 1983. Print.
• Dunlop, J. T. Automation and Technologican Change. Publishing city: Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall,
Inc., 1962. Print.
• Scott, E.L. Automation and Society. Publishing City: Athens, Georgia : The Center for the study of Automation
Society, 1969. Print.
External links
• IEEE Transactions on Automation Science and Engineering [10]
• ISA (International Society of Automation) [11]
References
[1] "Automation - Definitions from Dictionary.com" (http:/ / dictionary. reference. com/ browse/ Automation). dictionary.reference.com. .
Retrieved 2008-04-22.
[2] "30 Of The Fastest Declining Occupations" (http:/ / www. boston. com/ bostonworks/ galleries/ 30fast_declining_occupations?pg=10). The
Boston Globe. 2008-03-24. .
[3] Process automation, retrieved on 20.02.2010 (http:/ / www. bma-automation. com/ Prozessautomatisierung. 2102. 0. html?id=2102& L=1)
[4] The Luddites (http:/ / www. spartacus. schoolnet. co. uk/ PRluddites. htm)
[5] "Engineers' CAx education—it's not only CAD" (http:/ / www. sciencedirect. com/ science?_ob=ArticleURL& _udi=B6TYR-4C62R0B-2&
_user=10& _coverDate=12/ 31/ 2004& _rdoc=1& _fmt=high& _orig=browse& _sort=d& view=c& _acct=C000050221& _version=1&
_urlVersion=0& _userid=10& md5=cc7a4e3e1cfdc05c7556848feaecf169). .
[6] Stationary Engineers and Boiler Operators (http:/ / www. bls. gov/ oco/ ocos228. htm)
[7] Javed, O, & Shah, M. (2008). Automated multi-camera surveillance. City of Publication: Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
[8] Menzies, Thomas. R. National Automated Highway System Research Program A review. 253. Washington D.C.: Transportation Research
Board, 1998. 2-50.
[9] http:/ / www. isa. org/ Template. cfm?Section=Books3& template=/ Ecommerce/ ProductDisplay. cfm& ProductID=8800
[10] http:/ / goldberg. berkeley. edu/ t-ase/
[11] http:/ / www. isa. org
Article Sources and Contributors 8
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