
Cyberselves Universal Limited
Cyberselves Universal Limited
4 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2024Partners:Guidance Automation Ltd, Shadow Robot (United Kingdom), Guidance Automation Ltd, Connected Places Catapult, D-RisQ Ltd +22 partnersGuidance Automation Ltd,Shadow Robot (United Kingdom),Guidance Automation Ltd,Connected Places Catapult,D-RisQ Ltd,Consequential Robotics Ltd,KCL,Scoutek Ltd,Sheffield Childrens NHS Foundation Trust,ClearSy,Amazon Web Services, Inc.,British Telecommunications plc,Amazon (United States),D-RisQ (United Kingdom),Shadow Robot Company Ltd,BAE Systems (UK),Consequential Robots,Sheffield Children's NHS Foundation Trust,BAE Systems (Sweden),Bloc Digital,Bloc Digital,Connected Places Catapult,Scoutek Ltd,Cyberselves Universal Limited,BT Group (United Kingdom),ClearSy,Cyberselves Universal LimitedFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/V026801/2Funder Contribution: 2,621,150 GBPAutonomous systems promise to improve our lives; driverless trains and robotic cleaners are examples of autonomous systems that are already among us and work well within confined environments. It is time we work to ensure developers can design trustworthy autonomous systems for dynamic environments and provide evidence of their trustworthiness. Due to the complexity of autonomous systems, typically involving AI components, low-level hardware control, and sophisticated interactions with humans and the uncertain environment, evidence of any nature requires efforts from a variety of disciplines. To tackle this challenge, we gathered consortium of experts on AI, robotics, human-computer interaction, systems and software engineering, and testing. Together, we will establish the foundations and techniques for verification of properties of autonomous systems to inform designs, provide evidence of key properties, and guide monitoring after deployment. Currently, verifiability is hampered by several issues: difficulties to understand how evidence provided by techniques that focus on individual aspects of a system (control engineering, AI, or human interaction, for example) compose to provide evidence for the system as whole; difficulties of communication between stakeholders that use different languages and practices in their disciplines; difficulties in dealing with advanced concepts in AI, control and hardware design, software for critical systems; and others. As a consequence, autonomous systems are often developed using advanced engineering techniques, but outdated approaches to verification. We propose a creative programme of work that will enable fundamental changes to the current state of the art and of practice. We will define a mathematical framework that enables a common understanding of the diverse practices and concepts involved in verification of autonomy. Our framework will provide the mathematical underpinning, required by any engineering effort, to accommodate the notations used by the various disciplines. With this common understanding, we will justify translations between languages, compositions of artefacts (engineering models, tests, simulations, and so on) defined in different languages, and system-level inferences from verifications of components. With such a rich foundation and wealth of results, we will transform the state of practice. Currently, developers build systems from scratch, or reusing components without any evidence of their operational conditions. Resulting systems are deployed in constrained conditions (reduced speed or contained environment, for example) or offered for deployment at the user's own risk. Instead, we envisage the future availability of a store of verified autonomous systems and components. In such a future, in the store, users will find not just system implementations, but also evidence of their operational conditions and expected behaviour (engineering models, mathematical results, tests, and so on). When a developer checks in a product, the store will require all these artefacts, described in well understood languages, and will automatically verify the evidence of trustworthiness. Developers will also be able to check in components for other developers; equally, they will be accompanied by evidence required to permit confidence in their use. In this changed world, users will buy applications with clear guarantees of their operational requirements and profile. Users will also be able to ask for verification of adequacy for customised platforms and environment, for example. Verification is no longer an issue. Working with the EPSRC TAS Hub and other nodes, and our extensive range of academic and industrial partners, we will collaborate to ensure that the notations, verification techniques, and properties, that we consider, contribute to our common agenda to bring autonomy to our everyday lives.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2020 - 2021Partners:Shadow Robot Company Ltd, University of Leicester, British Telecommunications plc, ClearSy, BT Group (United Kingdom) +25 partnersShadow Robot Company Ltd,University of Leicester,British Telecommunications plc,ClearSy,BT Group (United Kingdom),D-RisQ (United Kingdom),Consequential Robots,Sheffield Children's NHS Foundation Trust,University of Leicester,D-RisQ Ltd,Guidance Automation Ltd,Cyberselves Universal Limited,BAE Systems (United Kingdom),Connected Places Catapult,Amazon Web Services, Inc.,Consequential Robotics Ltd,Scoutek Ltd,Sheffield Childrens NHS Foundation Trust,ClearSy,Amazon (United States),BAE Systems (Sweden),Bloc Digital,Scoutek Ltd,Bloc Digital,Cyberselves Universal Limited,BAE Systems (UK),Connected Places Catapult,BT Group (United Kingdom),Guidance Automation Ltd,Shadow Robot (United Kingdom)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/V026801/1Funder Contribution: 2,923,650 GBPAutonomous systems promise to improve our lives; driverless trains and robotic cleaners are examples of autonomous systems that are already among us and work well within confined environments. It is time we work to ensure developers can design trustworthy autonomous systems for dynamic environments and provide evidence of their trustworthiness. Due to the complexity of autonomous systems, typically involving AI components, low-level hardware control, and sophisticated interactions with humans and the uncertain environment, evidence of any nature requires efforts from a variety of disciplines. To tackle this challenge, we gathered consortium of experts on AI, robotics, human-computer interaction, systems and software engineering, and testing. Together, we will establish the foundations and techniques for verification of properties of autonomous systems to inform designs, provide evidence of key properties, and guide monitoring after deployment. Currently, verifiability is hampered by several issues: difficulties to understand how evidence provided by techniques that focus on individual aspects of a system (control engineering, AI, or human interaction, for example) compose to provide evidence for the system as whole; difficulties of communication between stakeholders that use different languages and practices in their disciplines; difficulties in dealing with advanced concepts in AI, control and hardware design, software for critical systems; and others. As a consequence, autonomous systems are often developed using advanced engineering techniques, but outdated approaches to verification. We propose a creative programme of work that will enable fundamental changes to the current state of the art and of practice. We will define a mathematical framework that enables a common understanding of the diverse practices and concepts involved in verification of autonomy. Our framework will provide the mathematical underpinning, required by any engineering effort, to accommodate the notations used by the various disciplines. With this common understanding, we will justify translations between languages, compositions of artefacts (engineering models, tests, simulations, and so on) defined in different languages, and system-level inferences from verifications of components. With such a rich foundation and wealth of results, we will transform the state of practice. Currently, developers build systems from scratch, or reusing components without any evidence of their operational conditions. Resulting systems are deployed in constrained conditions (reduced speed or contained environment, for example) or offered for deployment at the user's own risk. Instead, we envisage the future availability of a store of verified autonomous systems and components. In such a future, in the store, users will find not just system implementations, but also evidence of their operational conditions and expected behaviour (engineering models, mathematical results, tests, and so on). When a developer checks in a product, the store will require all these artefacts, described in well understood languages, and will automatically verify the evidence of trustworthiness. Developers will also be able to check in components for other developers; equally, they will be accompanied by evidence required to permit confidence in their use. In this changed world, users will buy applications with clear guarantees of their operational requirements and profile. Users will also be able to ask for verification of adequacy for customised platforms and environment, for example. Verification is no longer an issue. Working with the EPSRC TAS Hub and other nodes, and our extensive range of academic and industrial partners, we will collaborate to ensure that the notations, verification techniques, and properties, that we consider, contribute to our common agenda to bring autonomy to our everyday lives.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2025Partners:Medical Device Manufacturing Centre, Digital Health and Care Institute, Bristol Health Partners, UBC, National Rehabilitation Center +30 partnersMedical Device Manufacturing Centre,Digital Health and Care Institute,Bristol Health Partners,UBC,National Rehabilitation Center,NHS Lothian,Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,Skills for Care,Blackwood,NTU,Consequential Robotics Ltd,Innovation Centre for Sensor and Imaging Systems,North Bristol NHS Trust,University of Nottingham,Consequential Robotics (to be replaced),Blackwood Homes and Care,The Medical Device (United Kingdom),Johnnie Johnson Housing and Astraline,CENSIS,Digital Health and Care Institute,Scottish Health Innovations Ltd,Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust,Blackwood Homes and Care,Cyberselves Universal Limited,National Rehabilitation Center,Johnnie Johnson Housing and Astraline,Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust,Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust,Cyberselves Universal Limited,North Bristol NHS Trust,InnoScot Health,Bristol Health Partners,NHS Lothian,Skills for Care,PAL RoboticsFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/W000741/1Funder Contribution: 708,125 GBPThe EMERGENCE network aims to create a sustainable eco-system of researchers, businesses, end-users, health and social care commissioners and practitioners, policy makers and regulatory bodies in order to build knowledge and capability needed to enable healthcare robots to support people living with frailty in the community. By adopting a person-centred approach to developing healthcare robotics technology we seek to improve the quality of life and independence of older people at risk of, and living with frailty, whilst helping to contain spiralling care costs. Individuals with frailty have different needs but, commonly, assistance is needed in activities related to mobility, self-care and domestic life, social activities and relationships. Healthcare can be enhanced by supporting people to better self-manage the conditions resulting from frailty, and improving information and data flow between individuals and healthcare practitioners, enabling more timely interventions. Providing cost-effective and high-quality support for an aging population is a high priority issue for the government. The lack of adequate social care provisions in the community and funding cuts have added to the pressures on an already overstretched healthcare system. The gaps in ability to deliver the requisite quality of care, in the face of a shrinking care workforce, have been particularly exposed during the ongoing Covid-19 crisis. Healthcare robots are increasingly recognised as solutions in helping people improve independent living, by having the ability to offer physical assistance as well as supporting complex self-management and healthcare tasks when integrated with patient data. The EMERGENCE network will foster and facilitate innovative research and development of healthcare robotic solutions so that they can be realised as pragmatic and sustainable solutions providing personalised, affordable and inclusive health and social care in the community. We will work with our clinical partners and user groups to translate the current health and social care challenges in assessing, reducing and managing frailty into a set of clear and actionable requirements that will inspire novel research and enable engineers to develop appropriate healthcare robotics solutions. We will also establish best practice guidelines for informing the design and development of healthcare robotics solutions, addressing assessment, reduction and self-management of frailty and end-user interactions for people with age-related sensory, physical and cognitive impairments. This will help the UK develop cross-cutting research capabilities in ethical design, evaluation and production of healthcare robots. To enable the design and evaluation of healthcare robotic solutions we will utilize the consortium's living lab test beds. These include the Assisted Living Studio in the Bristol Robotics Lab covering the South West, the National Robotarium in Edinburgh together with the Health Innovation South East Scotland's Midlothian test bed, the Advanced Wellbeing Research Centre and HomeLab in Sheffield, and the Robot House at the University of Hertfordshire covering the South East. Up to 10 funded feasibility studies will drive co-designed, high quality research that will lead to technologies capable of transforming community health and care. The network will also establish safety and regulatory requirements to ensure that healthcare robotic solutions can be easily deployed and integrated as part of community-based frailty care packages. In addition, we will identify gaps in the skills set of carers and therapists that might prevent them from using robotic solutions effectively and inform the development of training content to address these gaps. This will foster the regulatory, political and commercial environments and the workforce skills needed to make the UK a global leader in the use of robotics to support the government's ageing society grand challenge.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2020 - 2024Partners:Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Autonomous Drivers Alliance, Bradford Teaching Hospitals, Lero, CLAWAR Ltd +75 partnersLancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,Autonomous Drivers Alliance,Bradford Teaching Hospitals,Lero,CLAWAR Ltd,PUBLIC HEALTH ENGLAND,Shadow Robot Company Ltd,Lero (The Irish Software Research Ctr),GoSouthCoast,Ocado Technology,TechnipFMC (International),Bristol Robotics Laboratory,Health & Social Care Information Centre,Sheffield Children's NHS Foundation Trust,Autonomous Drivers Alliance,Thales UK Limited,CRODA EUROPE LTD,KUKA Robotics UK Limited,UCF,Connected Places Catapult,Thales (United Kingdom),CRODA EUROPE LIMITED,Milton Keynes Hospital,Consequential Robotics Ltd,PHE,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,GoSouthCoast,Ocado Technology,Lancashire & South Cumbria NHS Fdn Trust,ATACC group,Connected Places Catapult,KUKA Robotics UK Limited,Chartered Inst of Ergo & Human Factors,NHS Digital,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,Bristol Robotics Laboratory,Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust,Kompai Robotics,Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre,Robert Bosch (Germany),National Institute of Informatics,Sheffield Childrens NHS Foundation Trust,University of Western Australia,ClearSy,Cyberselves Universal Limited,Public Health England,CLAWAR Ltd,UWA,National Institute of Informatics,ATACC group,ClearSy,Croda (United Kingdom),TechnipFMC (France),Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre,DHSC,RAC Foundation,University of York,Kompai Robotics,Defence Science and Technology Laboratory,Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,Consequential Robotics (to be replaced),National Institute of Informatics,Cyberselves Universal Limited,Welsh Ambulance Services NHS Trust,IAM RoadSmart,ADVANCED MANUFACTURING RESEARCH CENTRE,Lancashire and South Cumbira NHS Trust,IAM RoadSmart,Shadow Robot (United Kingdom),Bradford Teaching Hospitals,University of York,KUKA (United Kingdom),Welsh Ambulance Services NHS Trust,RAC Foundation for Motoring,Robert Bosch (Germany),THALES UK LIMITED,Resilient Cyber Security Solutions,Resilient Cyber Security Solutions,University of Central Florida,Milton Keynes HospitalFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/V026747/1Funder Contribution: 3,063,680 GBPImagine a future where autonomous systems are widely available to improve our lives. In this future, autonomous robots unobtrusively maintain the infrastructure of our cities, and support people in living fulfilled independent lives. In this future, autonomous software reliably diagnoses disease at early stages, and dependably manages our road traffic to maximise flow and minimise environmental impact. Before this vision becomes reality, several major limitations of current autonomous systems need to be addressed. Key among these limitations is their reduced resilience: today's autonomous systems cannot avoid, withstand, recover from, adapt, and evolve to handle the uncertainty, change, faults, failure, adversity, and other disruptions present in such applications. Recent and forthcoming technological advances will provide autonomous systems with many of the sensors, actuators and other functional building blocks required to achieve the desired resilience levels, but this is not enough. To be resilient and trustworthy in these important applications, future autonomous systems will also need to use these building blocks effectively, so that they achieve complex technical requirements without violating our social, legal, ethical, empathy and cultural (SLEEC) rules and norms. Additionally, they will need to provide us with compelling evidence that the decisions and actions supporting their resilience satisfy both technical and SLEEC-compliance goals. To address these challenging needs, our project will develop a comprehensive toolbox of mathematically based notations and models, SLEEC-compliant resilience-enhancing methods, and systematic approaches for developing, deploying, optimising, and assuring highly resilient autonomous systems and systems of systems. To this end, we will capture the multidisciplinary nature of the social and technical aspects of the environment in which autonomous systems operate - and of the systems themselves - via mathematical models. For that, we have a team of Computer Scientists, Engineers, Psychologists, Philosophers, Lawyers, and Mathematicians, with an extensive track record of delivering research in all areas of the project. Working with such a mathematical model, autonomous systems will determine which resilience- enhancing actions are feasible, meet technical requirements, and are compliant with the relevant SLEEC rules and norms. Like humans, our autonomous systems will be able to reduce uncertainty, and to predict, detect and respond to change, faults, failures and adversity, proactively and efficiently. Like humans, if needed, our autonomous systems will share knowledge and services with humans and other autonomous agents. Like humans, if needed, our autonomous systems will cooperate with one another and with humans, and will proactively seek assistance from experts. Our work will deliver a step change in developing resilient autonomous systems and systems of systems. Developers will have notations and guidance to specify the socio-technical norms and rules applicable to the operational context of their autonomous systems, and techniques to design resilient autonomous systems that are trustworthy and compliant with these norms and rules. Additionally, developers will have guidance to build autonomous systems that can tolerate disruption, making the system usable in a larger set of circumstances. Finally, they will have techniques to develop resilient autonomous systems that can share information and services with peer systems and humans, and methods for providing evidence of the resilience of their systems. In such a context, autonomous systems and systems of systems will be highly resilient and trustworthy.
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