Northeast Manufacturing News - Manufacturing News Northeast Nov 2024

Machine Vision Brings Sight and Insight to Industry 5.0 Strategies

2024-11-06 05:04:58

The next phase of the ongoing development of the industrial sector is being referred to as Industry 5.0, or 5IR for short. Rather than launching a revolution, 5IR seeks to expand on the foundation established by its predecessor, Industry 4.0, which forever disrupted the industrial landscape by introducing big data, automation, cloud computing, artificial intelligence, M2M and the Internet of Things (IoT).

“Companies and whole industries are still in the midst of aligning their operations with Industry 4.0,” said an Advantech spokesperson. “As they do, some are adopting the aims of 5IR. Chief among those aims is to foster greater collaboration between humans and Industry 4.0 technology, especially in tasks that require creativity, complex decision-making and emotional skills. In that way, companies that roll out 5IR get the best of both worlds: human ingenuity paired with automated efficiency to obtain a competitive advantage.”

Being human-centric, 5IR has farreaching implications for employees. 5IR brings them back onto the plant floor, a step that adds agility and flexibility to automated yet rigid manufacturing processes by enabling the workers to play an active role in decision making.

Although still in its early stages, some possible use cases for 5IR have been identified, including:

• Manufacturing: AI-enabled collaborative robots (cobots) and smart devices will play a larger role in 5IR than Industry 4.0. Like an apprentice, the new breed of cobot can visually observe complex human processes and learn to perform them so they can free workers from repetitive and monotonous tasks. Cobots can work safely alongside humans, which opens new prospects for manufacturing, instead of being gated off for safety like a traditional robot. Human and machines working together allows employees to focus on creating value for customers through customization and innovation. Smart devices can observe, analyze and comprehend visual data to recognize and distinguish differences due to specialized algorithms that automate visual understanding and pattern matching.

• Security: AI can uncover patterns of human behavior by analyzing video footage. This will help surveillance systems detect early actions that may predict a security incident or an access breach. Footage from retail surveillance cameras can also be a tool for gaining insights into customer needs, preferences and behaviors when combined with data analytics.

• Transportation: Integrating visual systems into vehicles and alongside roadways improves driver safety and environmental sustainability, while enhancing business distribution through reduced congestion and route optimization for logistics.

As these examples show, imaging technology is at the core of achieving many of the ambitious goals of 5IR. Machine vision in the 5IR age provide robots, cobots and machines with human-like “sight” combined with AI “insight.”

Leveraging the capabilities of highresolution digital cameras, lightningfast networks, GPT’s multimodal capabilities and AI-powered software will be necessary to take machine vision to this new level. Deep learning, a subset of AI, can teach a machine to contextualize the acquired visual data, so that it can mimic human cognition to make predictive decisions. Natural language processing also lets these same systems read and interpret information contained in visual data, such as reading labels on pharmaceutical packaging, as opposed to traditional rule-based machine vision approaches that necessitate large amounts of technical skill and considerable programming.

Transmission from Camera to PC

Although Industry 4.0 and Industry 5.0 represent two distinct phases in the evolution of industrial processes, they have one thing in common: a reliance on the transmission of bandwidth-intensive, real-time image data.

That being the case, the lynchpin to 5IR may lie in the space between the camera and the PC in the form of a frame grabber. The purpose of this computer accessory is to capture images from a camera and transmit those images to the host memory of the PC for processing.

There are a few different transmission standards for frame grabbers, with the most common being Camera Link (CL) over Ethernet cables, Camera Link over LVDS cabling and CoaXPress (CXP) over coaxial cables.

“When compared to nonframe grabber- based transmission methods like GigE Vision or USB3, CoaXPress frame grabbers allow faster, more dependable data transmission for an image system,” said the spokesperson. “Since it was introduced in 2008, the CoaXPress interface has proven to be the ideal balance between system costs and growing requirements for faster speeds, extended length cables, heat dissipation and power delivery via power over CXP.”

The latest version of CoaXPress, the CXP 2.1 interface, is particularly wellsuited for 5IR imaging applications. It meets the need for speed by offering transfer data rates of up to 12.5 gigabits per second (Gbps) per link over a single coaxial cable or 50 Gbps over four cables when all four links are used for a single camera. Not only does CoaXPress carry image data over a single coax cable, but camera communication, control and power.

The latest add-on is CoaXPress Over Fiber (CoF). Industry experts foresee CoF serving as a viable pathway towards 100, 200 and even 400 Gbps, that is, speeds well beyond the capabilities of coaxial cables. In addition to speed, CoF is expected to achieve distances up to 80 km (about 49.71 mi.) in single-mode and 300 m (about 984.25’) in multimode without the use of error-prone extenders.

CXP Combined with AI

Graphics processing units (GPUs) are a key lever to increasing productivity and competitiveness via AI-enabled technologies. Powered with thousands of processor cores and designed with a highly parallelable architecture, GPUs are accelerating high-performance computing workloads, deep learning and inference.

CoaXPress frame grabbers are increasingly being engineered for compatibility with the latest generation of GPUs to fast-track prototype system development and deployment of vision systems, robotics and sophisticated edge AI applications. This development merges the lightning-fast data rate speeds of CoaXPress 2.1 with the unprecedented computational capabilities and large shared memory for CPU and embedded GPU of devices, such as the NVIDIA Jetson Orin and the Advantech AIR-030 AI Inference System Box. Building complex machine vision and autonomous inspection applications is made possible by CXP/GPU solutions, which combine AIaccelerated image processing with interface support for numerous CoaXPress (CXP) cameras at up to 50 GB per second. It is also an ideal platform for prototyping end-to-end AI applications.

Industry 4.0 is being driven by advances in machine vision and AI-enabled technologies, which will also serve as the foundation of 5IR. Having the right vision hardware in place is vital to being successful in this journey. Machine vision, and specifically the CoaXPress interface, creates a more seamless interplay between humans and machines. In addition, it can help 5IR in reducing production waste, increasing sustainability and improving efficiency.

Authored by Donal Waide, Director of Business Development, Industrial Cloud & Video Group, Advantech

BitFlow, Inc.
400 West Cummings Park
Suite 5050
Woburn, MA 01801
781-932-2900
www.bitflow.com

Advantech
222 Rosewood Drive
Danvers, MA 01923
800-866-6008
www.advantech.com

©Gross Publications. View All Articles.

Machine Vision Brings Sight and Insight to Industry 5.0 Strategies
https://mfgnewsdigital.mydigitalpublication.com/article/Machine+Vision+Brings+Sight+and+Insight+to+Industry+5.0+Strategies/4883716/835445/article.html

Menu
  • Page View
  • Contents View
  • Advertisers
  • Website

Issue List

March 2026

February 2026

Northeast Manuf News Jan 2026

Northeast ManufNews Dec 2025

Northeast ManufNews Nov 2025

Northeast Manufacturing News Oct 2025

Northeast Manuf News Sept 2025

Northest ManufNews Aug

Northeast Manuf News July 2025

NE ManufNews June 2025

Northeast Manufacturing News May 2025

Northeast Manufacturing News April 2025

Northeast Manufacturing News Mar

Northeast Manufacturing Feb

Northeast Manufacturing News Jan 2025

Manufacturing News Northeast Dec

Manufacturing News Northeast Nov 2024

Northeast Maufacturing Oct 2024

Northeast Manufacturing News Sept 2024

Northeast Manufacturing News Aug 2024

Northeast Manufacturing News July 2024

Northeast Manufacturing News June 2024

Northeast Manufacturing News May 2024

Northeast Manufacturing News April 2024

NE Manufacturing News March 2024

Northeast Feb 2024

Northeast Jan 2024

Northeast Maufacturing News Dec 2023

Nov 23

Oct 23

Sept 23

Aug 23

July 23

May 23

May 23

Apr 23

Mar 23

Feb 23

Jan 23

December 2022

Nov 22

Oct 22

Sept 22

Aug 22

July 22

June 22

May 22

April 22

Mar 22

Feb 22

Jan 22

Dec 21

Nov 21

Oct 21

Sept 21

Aug 21

July 21

June 21

May 21

April 21

March 21

Feb 21

Jan 21

Dec 20

Nov 20

Oct 20

Sept 20

Aug 20

July 20

June 20

May 20

April 20

March 20

Feb 20

Jan 20

Dec 19

Nov 19

Oct 19

Sept 19

Aug 19

July 19

June 2019

May 19

April 19

March 19

Feb 19

Jan 19

Dec 18

Nov 18

Oct 18

Sept 18

Aug 18

July 2018

June 2018

May 2018

April 2018

March 2018

February 2018

January 2018

December 2017

November 2017

October 2017

September 2017

August 2017

July 2017

June 2017

May 2017

April 2017

March 2017

February 2017

January 2017

December 2016

November 2016

October 2016

September 2016

August 2016

July 2016

June 2016

May 2016

April 2016

March 2016

February 2016

January 2016

December 2015

November 2015

October 2015

September 2015

August 2015

July 2015

June 2015

May 2015

April 2015

March 2015

February 2015

January 2015

December 2014

November 2014

October 2014

September 2014

August 2014

July 2014

June 2014

May 2014

April 2014

March 2014

February 2014

January 2014

December 2013

November 2013

October 2013

September 2013

August 2013

July 2013

June 2013

May 2013

April 2013

March 2013

February 2013

January 2013

December 2012

November 2012

October 2012

September 2012

August 2012

July 2012

June 2012

May 2012

April 2012

March 2012

February 2012

January 2012

December 2011

November 2011

October 2011

September 2011

August 2011

July 2011

June 2011

May 2011

April 2011

March 2011

February 2011

January 2011

December 2010

November 2010

October 2010

September 2010

August 2010

July 2010

June 2010

May 2010

April 2010

March 2010

February 2010

January 2010

December 2009

November 2009

October 2009

September 2009


Library