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Industrial Robotics and the Future of Work

  • John Howard
  • , Vladimir Murashov
  • , Gary Roth
  • , Christopher Wendt
  • , Jacob Carr
  • , Marvin Cheng
  • , Scott Earnest
  • , K. C. Elliott
  • , Emily Haas
  • , Ci Jyun Liang
  • , Gretchen Petery
  • , Jennifer Ragsdale
  • , Christopher Reid
  • , Peregrin Spielholz
  • , Douglas Trout
  • , Divya Srinivasan
  • National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
  • Boeing
  • Clemson University

Research output: Contribution to journalComment/debate

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

Starting in the 1970s with robots that were physically isolated from contact with their human co-workers, robots now collaborate with human workers towards a common task goal in a shared workspace. This type of robotic device represents a new era of workplace automation. Industrial robotics is rapidly evolving due to advances in sensor technology, artificial intelligence (AI), wireless communications, mechanical engineering, and materials science. While these new robotic devices are used mainly in manufacturing and warehousing, human-robot collaboration is now seen across multiple goods-producing and service-delivery industry sectors. Assessing and controlling the risks of human-robot collaboration is a critical challenge for occupational safety and health research and practice as industrial robotics becomes a pervasive feature of the future of work. Understanding the physical, psychosocial, work organization, and cybersecurity risks associated with the increasing use of robotic technologies is critical to ensuring the safe development and implementation of industrial robotics. This commentary provides a brief review of the uses of robotic technologies across selected industry sectors; the risks of current and future industrial robotic applications for worker and employer alike; strategies for integrating human-robot collaboration into a health and safety management system; and the role of robotic safety standards in the future of work.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)559-572
Number of pages14
JournalAmerican Journal of Industrial Medicine
Volume68
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2025

Keywords

  • cobots
  • future of work
  • human-robot collaboration
  • risk
  • standards

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