Research and development in agricultural robotics: A perspective of digital farming

Digital farming is the practice of modern technologies such as sensors, robotics, and data analysis for shifting from tedious operations to continuously automated processes. This paper reviews some of the latest achievements in agricultural robotics, specifically those that are used for autonomous w...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of agricultural and biological engineering Vol. 11; no. 4; pp. 1 - 11
Main Authors Ramin Shamshiri, Redmond, Weltzien, Cornelia, A. Hameed, Ibrahim, J. Yule, Ian, E. Grift, Tony, K. Balasundram, Siva, Pitonakova, Lenka, Ahmad, Desa, Chowdhary, Girish
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Beijing International Journal of Agricultural and Biological Engineering (IJABE) 01.07.2018
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Summary:Digital farming is the practice of modern technologies such as sensors, robotics, and data analysis for shifting from tedious operations to continuously automated processes. This paper reviews some of the latest achievements in agricultural robotics, specifically those that are used for autonomous weed control, field scouting, and harvesting. Object identification, task planning algorithms, digitalization and optimization of sensors are highlighted as some of the facing challenges in the context of digital farming. The concepts of multi-robots, human-robot collaboration, and environment reconstruction from aerial images and ground-based sensors for the creation of virtual farms were highlighted as some of the gateways of digital farming. It was shown that one of the trends and research focuses in agricultural field robotics is towards building a swarm of small scale robots and drones that collaborate together to optimize farming inputs and reveal denied or concealed information. For the case of robotic harvesting, an autonomous framework with several simple axis manipulators can be faster and more efficient than the currently adapted professional expensive manipulators. While robots are becoming the inseparable parts of the modern farms, our conclusion is that it is not realistic to expect an entirely automated farming system in the future.
ISSN:1934-6344
1934-6352
DOI:10.25165/j.ijabe.20181104.4278