Robotics

Robotic librarians hit the books

Robotic librarians hit the books
Researchers have designed an autonomous robotic librarian that scans RFID tags and can help locate misplaced books
Researchers have designed an autonomous robotic librarian that scans RFID tags and can help locate misplaced books
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Researchers have designed an autonomous robotic librarian that scans RFID tags and can help locate misplaced books
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Researchers have designed an autonomous robotic librarian that scans RFID tags and can help locate misplaced books

Computer systems have helped catalogue libraries for decades, but if some reckless reader has put a book back in the wrong spot, it's a daunting task for librarians to search the entire building for it – but not for robotic librarians. Researchers at A*STAR's Institute for Infocomm Research are designing robots that can self-navigate through libraries at night, scanning spines and shelves to report back on missing or out-of-place books.

This autonomous robotic shelf-scanning (AuRoSS) platform scans RFID tags on the books and produces a report. In the morning, the human librarians can check the results and can easily see which books are in the wrong spot and where they belong. There's still a need for human labor, but it's far less time-consuming than manually searching every shelf for misplaced titles.

The wheeled robot uses lasers and ultrasonic sensors to guide it through the stacks with precision down to the centimeter. "We decided to detect the shelf surface itself, and use that as a reference to plan the paths," says Renjun Li, one of the researchers on the project.

It does this with the help of a robot arm that adjusts the RFID antenna to keep within the optimal tag-scanning distance: too far back and the signal is lost, but too close and it will hit the shelf.

AuRoSS has been trialled in libraries in Singapore, where it achieved up to 99 percent accuracy, even with curved shelves. The researchers say that the system can easily incorporate different sensors beyond RFID, including cameras, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi, and could be adapted for use in warehouses, retail stores, or in the MedTech, Aerospace and Automotive industries.

Source: A*STAR Research [1], [2]

4 comments
4 comments
CharlieSeattle
Is nothing sacred?
LarrySchwartz
Stop calling book shelvers "librarians." Unless they are, in fact, degreed librarians.
ljaques
This is wonderful news. I've left the library without countless dozens of books due to misfiling. Then the library called me the same or next day, having found the missing tomes. I only hope they're competitively priced so small libraries like our County library here in Grants Pass can afford one or six. Bookshelvers and librarians alike are certain to be happy with the new bots.
Mark Salamon
As someone who has worked as a Library Technician, I think this is brilliant. It is unfortunately true that the majority of libraries are underfunded, which usually means that there are too many demands placed on the staff. I remember when I was employed in Reserves, the department responsible for routing media materials that patrons have placed on hold, I had to work as fast as I humanly could, just to keep up with the daily requests. This task was made even more difficult by needing to locate library materials that were in the wrong place. Even though all the staff in the library were given "shelf-check" duty, requiring them to ensure that a specifically assigned section of the library was in correct order, it was impossible to accomplish this job since everyone was already overburdened with other, more crucial tasks. And to be honest, shelf-checking was an unrewarding labor of Sisyphus, because your efforts would be undone almost as soon as you finished. Robots like these would eliminate this thankless activity, and free librarians to devote their energy and intelligence to better work.