Wireless Human-Machine Collaboration in Industry 5.0
Gaoyang Pang, Wanchun Liu, Dusit Niyato, Daniel Quevedo, Branka, Vucetic, Yonghui Li

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive stability analysis framework for Wireless Human-Machine Collaboration systems in Industry 5.0, incorporating wireless communication factors, human dynamics, and control system complexities.
Contribution
It introduces a novel stochastic model for WHMC systems with dual wireless loops and derives stability conditions considering practical wireless and human factors.
Findings
Validated stability conditions through simulations.
Demonstrated system stability with a wireless cart-pole experiment.
Provided a robust framework for future WHMC research.
Abstract
Wireless Human-Machine Collaboration (WHMC) represents a critical advancement for Industry 5.0, enabling seamless interaction between humans and machines across geographically distributed systems. As the WHMC systems become increasingly important for achieving complex collaborative control tasks, ensuring their stability is essential for practical deployment and long-term operation. Stability analysis certifies how the closed-loop system will behave under model randomness, which is essential for systems operating with wireless communications. However, the fundamental stability analysis of the WHMC systems remains an unexplored challenge due to the intricate interplay between the stochastic nature of wireless communications, dynamic human operations, and the inherent complexities of control system dynamics. This paper establishes a fundamental WHMC model incorporating dual wireless loops…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Transformation in Industry
