Skip to content
Manufacturing

Research explores safer, smarter human-robot teamwork in Industry 5.0

Monash University 2 mins read

A new review published in the International Journal of Production Research explores how manufacturers can make human-robot collaboration safer, more adaptive and efficient by improving the way robots predict human behaviour in shared industrial environments.

As manufacturing moves toward Industry 5.0, production systems are becoming more human-centred, combining human creativity, judgement and dexterity with robotic precision, strength and speed. 

But as people and robots work more closely together, new safety and coordination challenges emerge. If robots cannot accurately anticipate what a worker will do next, the risk of collisions, delays and inefficient collaboration increases.

The review examines the major approaches used to predict human behaviour in human-robot collaboration, including mechanism-based models built around physical motion and interaction rules, data-driven models that learn from sensors and artificial intelligence, and hybrid approaches that combine both. 

The researchers show that while each method has strengths, more integrated approaches are likely to be the most effective for future human-centric manufacturing systems.

The paper also points out several key challenges that require attention including variability of human behaviour, the absence of standardised multimodal datasets, the limited scope of physical world models, and the need to more effectively consider human trust, workload, and cognitive state during collaboration.

To address these gaps, the authors propose a unified framework that integrates multimodal data, physical world modelling, behaviour prediction, and adaptive control.

Co-author Yunlong Tang, Assistant Director of the Monash Centre for Additive Manufacturing, and Senior Lecturer in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and Materials Science and Engineering, said improving how robots interpret and respond to human behaviour will be essential for the next generation of manufacturing systems. 

“Industry 5.0 is about designing manufacturing systems around people as well as technology. By improving how robots predict human behaviour, we can move towards production environments that are not only more productive, but also safer, more adaptive and more human-centred,” Mr Tang said.

The review suggests that future progress will depend on combining physical models, sensor data and AI in ways that allow robots to respond more intelligently to human movement, intent and changing working conditions.

The research highlights how more intelligent prediction and planning tools could help manufacturers improve safety, strengthen collaboration between workers and robots, and build production systems that are more resilient, efficient and responsive. 

As Industry 5.0 continues to evolve, these kinds of human-centred approaches are expected to play an important role in shaping the future of advanced manufacturing.

Read the full paper here: https://doi.org/10.1080/00207543.2026.2639732

MEDIA ENQUIRIES 

Courtney Karayannis, Media and Communications Manager

Monash University

P: +61 408 508 454

E: [email protected] 

 

GENERAL MEDIA ENQUIRIES

Monash Media

P: +61 3 9903 4840

E: [email protected]

For more experts, news, opinion and analysis, visit Monash News.

 

Media

More from this category

  • Aviation, Manufacturing
  • 19/03/2026
  • 09:03
Monash University

New research with implications for aircraft maintenance finds moisture is key

New research from engineers at Monash University and RMIT has revealed that moisture absorption is the most important factor in how carbon fibre used…

  • Contains:
  • Federal Budget, Manufacturing
  • 16/03/2026
  • 12:16
Weld Australia

An Open Letter to the Treasurer of Australia On Lifting Productivity Through Practical Reform

The Hon. Jim Chalmers MPTreasurer of AustraliaParliament HouseCanberra ACT 16 March 2026 Dear Treasurer, In recent weeks, you have made it clear that the upcoming Federal Budget will focus squarely on lifting Australia’s productivity — on “raising the speed limit” on our economy. On behalf of Weld Australia and the thousands of businesses and skilled tradespeople we represent across manufacturing, construction and heavy industry, I welcome that focus. But if we are serious about productivity reform, we must move beyond rhetoric and address the structural barriers that are quietly eroding output, competitiveness and living standards across Australia’s industrial base. Because…

  • Government NSW, Manufacturing
  • 16/03/2026
  • 11:09
MEDIA RELEASE

Timber workers head to NSW Parliament to push for secure jobs and local timber supply

16 March, 2026 Timber workers from across regional New South Wales will travel to Parliament House this week for a roundtable with industry, forestry representatives and skills leaders. Workers are pushing to secure the future of the state’s forestry and timber jobs. The Timber, Furnishing and Textiles Union (TFTU) says the two-day roundtable on 18–19 March will bring together worker representatives, employers and forestry experts to discuss practical solutions to stabilise the industry and support regional communities that depend on timber jobs. TFTU NSW Secretary Alison Rudman said timber workers wanted the NSW Government to recognise the importance of the…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.