A Review on Human-Centered IoT-Connected Smart Labels for the Industry 4.0

One of the challenges of Industry 4.0 is the creation of vertical networks that connect smart production systems with design teams, suppliers, and the front office. To achieve such a vision, information has to be collected from machines and products throughout a smart factory. Smart factories are de...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tiago M. Fernandez-Carames, Paula Fraga-Lamas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2018-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8355491/
id doaj-f2eec3bd101b4d57abfba798fda25713
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f2eec3bd101b4d57abfba798fda257132021-03-29T21:10:29ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362018-01-016259392595710.1109/ACCESS.2018.28335018355491A Review on Human-Centered IoT-Connected Smart Labels for the Industry 4.0Tiago M. Fernandez-Carames0Paula Fraga-Lamas1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4991-6808Department of Computer Engineering, Faculty of Computer Science, Campus de Elviña s/n, Universidade da Coruña, A Coruña, SpainDepartment of Computer Engineering, Faculty of Computer Science, Campus de Elviña s/n, Universidade da Coruña, A Coruña, SpainOne of the challenges of Industry 4.0 is the creation of vertical networks that connect smart production systems with design teams, suppliers, and the front office. To achieve such a vision, information has to be collected from machines and products throughout a smart factory. Smart factories are defined as flexible and fully connected factories that are able to make use of constant streams of data from operations and production systems. In such scenarios, the arguably most popular way for identifying and tracking objects is by adding labels or tags, which have evolved remarkably over the last years: from pure hand-written labels to barcodes, QR codes, and RFID tags. The latest trend in this evolution is smart labels which are not only mere identifiers with some kind of internal storage, but also sophisticated context-aware tags with embedded modules that make use of wireless communications, energy efficient displays, and sensors. Therefore, smart labels go beyond identification and are able to detect and react to the surrounding environment. Moreover, when the industrial Internet of Things paradigm is applied to smart labels attached to objects, they can be identified remotely and discovered by other Industry 4.0 systems, what allows such systems to react in the presence of smart labels, thus triggering specific events or performing a number of actions on them. The amount of possible interactions is endless and creates unprecedented industrial scenarios, where items can talk to each other and with tools, machines, remote computers, or workers. This paper, after reviewing the basics of Industry 4.0 and smart labels, details the latest technologies used by them, their applications, the most relevant academic and commercial implementations, and their internal architecture and design requirements, providing researchers with the necessary foundations for developing the next generation of Industry 4.0 human-centered smart label applications.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8355491/Smart labelshuman-computer interfacesmart objectsIndustry 40human-centered designtraceability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tiago M. Fernandez-Carames
Paula Fraga-Lamas
spellingShingle Tiago M. Fernandez-Carames
Paula Fraga-Lamas
A Review on Human-Centered IoT-Connected Smart Labels for the Industry 4.0
IEEE Access
Smart labels
human-computer interface
smart objects
Industry 40
human-centered design
traceability
author_facet Tiago M. Fernandez-Carames
Paula Fraga-Lamas
author_sort Tiago M. Fernandez-Carames
title A Review on Human-Centered IoT-Connected Smart Labels for the Industry 4.0
title_short A Review on Human-Centered IoT-Connected Smart Labels for the Industry 4.0
title_full A Review on Human-Centered IoT-Connected Smart Labels for the Industry 4.0
title_fullStr A Review on Human-Centered IoT-Connected Smart Labels for the Industry 4.0
title_full_unstemmed A Review on Human-Centered IoT-Connected Smart Labels for the Industry 4.0
title_sort review on human-centered iot-connected smart labels for the industry 4.0
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2018-01-01
description One of the challenges of Industry 4.0 is the creation of vertical networks that connect smart production systems with design teams, suppliers, and the front office. To achieve such a vision, information has to be collected from machines and products throughout a smart factory. Smart factories are defined as flexible and fully connected factories that are able to make use of constant streams of data from operations and production systems. In such scenarios, the arguably most popular way for identifying and tracking objects is by adding labels or tags, which have evolved remarkably over the last years: from pure hand-written labels to barcodes, QR codes, and RFID tags. The latest trend in this evolution is smart labels which are not only mere identifiers with some kind of internal storage, but also sophisticated context-aware tags with embedded modules that make use of wireless communications, energy efficient displays, and sensors. Therefore, smart labels go beyond identification and are able to detect and react to the surrounding environment. Moreover, when the industrial Internet of Things paradigm is applied to smart labels attached to objects, they can be identified remotely and discovered by other Industry 4.0 systems, what allows such systems to react in the presence of smart labels, thus triggering specific events or performing a number of actions on them. The amount of possible interactions is endless and creates unprecedented industrial scenarios, where items can talk to each other and with tools, machines, remote computers, or workers. This paper, after reviewing the basics of Industry 4.0 and smart labels, details the latest technologies used by them, their applications, the most relevant academic and commercial implementations, and their internal architecture and design requirements, providing researchers with the necessary foundations for developing the next generation of Industry 4.0 human-centered smart label applications.
topic Smart labels
human-computer interface
smart objects
Industry 40
human-centered design
traceability
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8355491/
work_keys_str_mv AT tiagomfernandezcarames areviewonhumancenterediotconnectedsmartlabelsfortheindustry40
AT paulafragalamas areviewonhumancenterediotconnectedsmartlabelsfortheindustry40
AT tiagomfernandezcarames reviewonhumancenterediotconnectedsmartlabelsfortheindustry40
AT paulafragalamas reviewonhumancenterediotconnectedsmartlabelsfortheindustry40
_version_ 1724193471078596608