TY - JOUR
T1 - Guest EditorialSpecial Issue on Situation, Activity, and Goal Awareness in Cyber-Physical Human-Machine Systems
AU - Chen, Liming
AU - Cook, DIane J.
AU - Guo, Bin
AU - Leister, Wolfgang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 IEEE.
PY - 2017/6
Y1 - 2017/6
N2 - The papers in this special section focus on cyber-physical man-machine systems with particular emphasis on situation, activity, and goal awareness deployed in these systems. Recent advances in sensing technologies, the Internet of Things, pervasive computing, smart environments have transformed traditional embedded ICT systems into an ecosystem of interconnected and collaborating smart objects, devices, embedded systems, and most importantly humans. Such systems, often referred to as cyber-physical systems (CPS), are usually human user-driven or user-centered, and are aimed at providing people and businesses with a wide range of innovative applications and services. For example, a smart home can monitor and analyze the daily activities of its inhabitants, usually the elderly or individuals with disabilities, so that personalized context-aware assistance can be provided. A smart city can monitor, manage, and potentially control all basic city functionalities such as transport, energy supply, and waste collection, at a higher level of automation by collecting and harnessing sensor data across a large geographic expanse. In order to respond in real-time to an individual user's speciï needs in dynamic and complex situations, and to support ergonomics and user-friendliness through consideration of human factors such as privacy, dignity, and behavior characteristics, cyber-physical human-machine systems need to be aware of the physical environment and human participant behavior. This awareness enables effective and fast feedback loops between sensing and actuation, possibly with cognitive and learning capabilities adapting to participant preferences, capabilities, and the modality of human-machine interaction as well as dynamic situations.
AB - The papers in this special section focus on cyber-physical man-machine systems with particular emphasis on situation, activity, and goal awareness deployed in these systems. Recent advances in sensing technologies, the Internet of Things, pervasive computing, smart environments have transformed traditional embedded ICT systems into an ecosystem of interconnected and collaborating smart objects, devices, embedded systems, and most importantly humans. Such systems, often referred to as cyber-physical systems (CPS), are usually human user-driven or user-centered, and are aimed at providing people and businesses with a wide range of innovative applications and services. For example, a smart home can monitor and analyze the daily activities of its inhabitants, usually the elderly or individuals with disabilities, so that personalized context-aware assistance can be provided. A smart city can monitor, manage, and potentially control all basic city functionalities such as transport, energy supply, and waste collection, at a higher level of automation by collecting and harnessing sensor data across a large geographic expanse. In order to respond in real-time to an individual user's speciï needs in dynamic and complex situations, and to support ergonomics and user-friendliness through consideration of human factors such as privacy, dignity, and behavior characteristics, cyber-physical human-machine systems need to be aware of the physical environment and human participant behavior. This awareness enables effective and fast feedback loops between sensing and actuation, possibly with cognitive and learning capabilities adapting to participant preferences, capabilities, and the modality of human-machine interaction as well as dynamic situations.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85028044381&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/THMS.2017.2689178
DO - 10.1109/THMS.2017.2689178
M3 - 文献综述
AN - SCOPUS:85028044381
SN - 2168-2291
VL - 47
SP - 305
EP - 309
JO - IEEE Transactions on Human-Machine Systems
JF - IEEE Transactions on Human-Machine Systems
IS - 3
M1 - 7927788
ER -