Co-designing human centric pathways for future skills in manufacturing through augmented, empowered, inclusive, and symbiotic complementarities between AI, automation and human task

Culture, Creativity & SocietyHORIZON-RIAID: 101177783
EC Contribution
€29,990
Consortium Size
14 orgs
Start Year
2024
Summary

The modern manufacturing landscape is undergoing a transformative twin transition, integrating green and digital technologies to bolster value chain resilience and explore re-shoring options. Amidst this paradigm shift, concerns about job displacement by machines, particularly through the rise of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML), have become more pronounced. This proposal delves into the challenges posed by the pursuit of excellence in the Industry 5.0 framework, focusing on the potential impact of digital technologies on job nature and the ensuing need for human-technology complementarity. The potential for AI to exacerbate social disparities and inequalities, especially for vulnerable groups, is also a significant concern. Additionally, the manufacturing sector faces labor shortages, impacting innovation capacity and economic competitiveness. The mission of SKillAIbility is to address these challenges, emphasizing the need for a human-centric approach to assess digital technologies and enhance workers' employability.The proposal also outlines the short, medium, and long-term contributions of SKillAIbility towards a resilient, inclusive, digital transition in the manufacturing industry. This initiative provides tools and methodologies to understand and respond to the impacts of emerging digital technology advancements on human tasks, skills, training, and policymaking. SKillAIbility's holistic impact spans various societal, industrial, academic, and regulatory dimensions, affecting citizens, people with disabilities, workers, trade unions, industry players, research institutions, and governmental bodies. Through upskilling and reskilling initiatives, SKillAIbility aims to empower citizens and workers, mitigate the risk of task automatization, and increase employability within the advanced manufacturing sector. Furthermore, the proposal contributes to the manufacturing industry's growth by filling skills gaps, increasing performance and pro

Consortium (14)

Project Results (6)

Source: CORDIS, the EU research results database.

Publications (6)
A Human-Centric Evaluation of Robotic Solutions in Production and Intralogistics
IFAC-PapersOnLine· 2025DOI
Amir Zare; Yüksel Değirmencioğlu Demiralay; Sotirios Panagou; Fabio Sgarbossa
Dawn of the Human-Only Era: Reframing Human-Centric AI and Workforce Values in the Age of Automation and Symbiosis
· 2025DOI
Panagou, Sotirios; Klumpp, Matthias
Guidelines for Designing Engineering Education in the Context of Industry 4.0 and 5.0
IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology, Advances in Production Management Systems. Cyber-Physical-Human Production Systems: Human-AI Collaboration and Beyond· 2025DOI
Mohammad Hossein Dehbozorgi, Fabiana Pirola, Rossella Pozzi, Daniele Contestabile, Brendan Patrick Sullivan, Monica Rossi, Sergio Terzi
Human-centric manufacturing and occupational noise: A review regarding what we know and what we should know
IFAC-PapersOnLine· 2025DOI
Sajjad Shooshtari, Matthias Klumpp
Interpreting Viability Metrics and KPIs in Manufacturing Based on Human-Centricity Approach
IFAC-PapersOnLine· 2025DOI
Marjan Gharahkhani; Sotirios Panagou
Leveraging AR/VR technologies to teach industry 5.0 principles to students and practitioners through learning factories
Proceedings of the Design Society· 2025DOI
Mohammad Hossein Dehbozorgi, Monica Rossi, Brendan Patrick Sullivan