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Industry 4. 0 : Paradoxes and Conflicts.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Newark : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, 2019Copyright date: ©2019Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (367 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781119644651
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Industry 4. 0LOC classification:
  • HD9720.5 .A537 2019
Online resources:
Contents:
Cover -- Half-Title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Abstract -- Foreword -- Preface -- Introduction -- 1. Industry 4.0: Definition and the Acceleration of Innovations -- 1.1. General framework -- 1.2. Application areas -- 1.3. Dissemination of Industry 4.0 and the disciplines that contribute to its development -- 1.4. Artificial intelligence -- 1.4.1. General framework -- 1.4.2. Current limitations of AI -- 1.4.3. Learning with AI -- 1.5. The Internet of Things -- 1.6. Additive manufacturing -- 1.7. Robotization and automation -- 1.8. Current situation of Industry 4.0 -- 1.8.1. Positioning -- 1.8.2. Industry 4.0 indicators -- 1.8.3. Some remarks -- 2. Disciplinary Boundaries -- 2.1. A return to the notion of the boundary object -- 2.1.1. From the idea to its processing -- 2.1.2. The issue of convergence -- 2.2. Interdisciplinarity -- 3. Technical Progress and Quality of Life at Work -- 3.1. General framework -- 3.2. Between acceptance and rejection, and between attractions and fears of technological progress -- 3.3. New organizations and new disorganizations -- 3.3.1. Co-working spaces -- 3.3.2. Connected workers -- 3.3.3. An obligation to train throughout life -- 3.3.4. The specific case of additive manufacturing -- 3.4. Environmental aspects -- 4. Elements of Foresight and Possible Effects of Conceivable Scenarios -- 4.1. Major trends -- 4.2. Four scenarios -- 4.2.1. Introduction -- 4.2.2. The four scenarios -- 4.2.3. Blocking factors and probable scenario(s) -- 4.3. Possible effects on the development of the "Industry 4.0" concept -- 4.3.1. Reminders on creative innovation -- 4.3.2. Scenario-Industry 4.0 relationships -- 5. What Can Be Done? -- 5.1. The administrative path -- 5.2. Effects on work based on the current inertial civilizational model -- 5.2.1. A preconclusion -- 5.3. New organizations.
5.4. Ways of resourcing European, national and/or individual innovation -- 5.4.1. Industry 4.0 and research -- 5.4.2. Disciplinary convergence -- 5.5. Convergences -- 5.5.1. A "bad" example of convergence: NBIC convergence -- 5.5.2. What about "silent" technologies? -- 5.5.3. The "boiling frog" fable -- 5.6. Encouraging transformative, risky and interdisciplinary research -- Conclusion: A Temporary Conclusion in a Rapidly Changing World -- References -- Index -- Other titles from iSTE in Systems and Industrial Engineering - Robotics -- EULA.
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Cover -- Half-Title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Abstract -- Foreword -- Preface -- Introduction -- 1. Industry 4.0: Definition and the Acceleration of Innovations -- 1.1. General framework -- 1.2. Application areas -- 1.3. Dissemination of Industry 4.0 and the disciplines that contribute to its development -- 1.4. Artificial intelligence -- 1.4.1. General framework -- 1.4.2. Current limitations of AI -- 1.4.3. Learning with AI -- 1.5. The Internet of Things -- 1.6. Additive manufacturing -- 1.7. Robotization and automation -- 1.8. Current situation of Industry 4.0 -- 1.8.1. Positioning -- 1.8.2. Industry 4.0 indicators -- 1.8.3. Some remarks -- 2. Disciplinary Boundaries -- 2.1. A return to the notion of the boundary object -- 2.1.1. From the idea to its processing -- 2.1.2. The issue of convergence -- 2.2. Interdisciplinarity -- 3. Technical Progress and Quality of Life at Work -- 3.1. General framework -- 3.2. Between acceptance and rejection, and between attractions and fears of technological progress -- 3.3. New organizations and new disorganizations -- 3.3.1. Co-working spaces -- 3.3.2. Connected workers -- 3.3.3. An obligation to train throughout life -- 3.3.4. The specific case of additive manufacturing -- 3.4. Environmental aspects -- 4. Elements of Foresight and Possible Effects of Conceivable Scenarios -- 4.1. Major trends -- 4.2. Four scenarios -- 4.2.1. Introduction -- 4.2.2. The four scenarios -- 4.2.3. Blocking factors and probable scenario(s) -- 4.3. Possible effects on the development of the "Industry 4.0" concept -- 4.3.1. Reminders on creative innovation -- 4.3.2. Scenario-Industry 4.0 relationships -- 5. What Can Be Done? -- 5.1. The administrative path -- 5.2. Effects on work based on the current inertial civilizational model -- 5.2.1. A preconclusion -- 5.3. New organizations.

5.4. Ways of resourcing European, national and/or individual innovation -- 5.4.1. Industry 4.0 and research -- 5.4.2. Disciplinary convergence -- 5.5. Convergences -- 5.5.1. A "bad" example of convergence: NBIC convergence -- 5.5.2. What about "silent" technologies? -- 5.5.3. The "boiling frog" fable -- 5.6. Encouraging transformative, risky and interdisciplinary research -- Conclusion: A Temporary Conclusion in a Rapidly Changing World -- References -- Index -- Other titles from iSTE in Systems and Industrial Engineering - Robotics -- EULA.

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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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