learning factory

Learning with Assistance Systems

Learning with Assistance Systems

Not Seeing the Process for the Tasks?
Gergana Vladova, Philip Wotschack, Patricia de Paiva Lareiro, Norbert Gronau ORCID Icon, Christof Thim
The paper describes the conception and implementation as well as offers an insight into the first results of a study with experimental design in a simulated process environment at the Research and Application Center Industry 4.0 in Potsdam. The focus is on learning processes in the field of simple work and their organization through the use of digital assistance systems. In labour research, there are indications that process knowledge is lost with the use of these systems, in the sense of a good knowledge of the entire work process in which the individual activities are embedded. To investigate the role of process knowledge in the use of digital assistance systems, a real factory situation is simulated in the experiment.
Industrie 4.0 Management | Volume 36 | 2020 | Edition 3 | Pages 16-20 | DOI 10.30844/I40M_20-3_S16-20
Human Work in Industrie 4.0

Human Work in Industrie 4.0

Actions to prepare enterprises for new requirements
Holger Kohl, Thomas Knothe ORCID Icon, Burkhard Schallock, Julia-Anne Scholz
Trends towards more customized products and shorter product life cycles are creating challenges, which companies are trying to meet with the use of Industrie 4.0 technologies. The digitalization and automation associated with this is causing employees in the manufacturing industry in particular to fear changes in work processes and requirements. This paper proposes four key socio-technical design measures to enable enterprises to cope with the new demands of human work in Industrie 4.0 - and thus to counteract fears. The focus is on increasing entrepreneurial agility and expanding employee skills.
Industrie 4.0 Management | Volume 35 | 2019 | Edition 6 | Pages 37-41
Holistic Resource Efficiency through Industry 4.0

Holistic Resource Efficiency through Industry 4.0

Thom Wienbruch, Dieter Kreimeier, Bernd Kuhlenkötter ORCID Icon
This article deals with the presentation of a concept that shows new possibilities for a holistic improvement in the company’s internal resource efficiency by using Industry 4.0. Subsequently, the structure of a resource management system will be shown. To attain a holistic improvement of the resource efficiency, the viewing frame will be extended to the whole product lifecycle to show which potentials a coupling along the entire value-added chain provides.
Industrie 4.0 Management | Volume 33 | 2017 | Edition 1 | Pages 62-66
Green Factory Bavaria in Augsburg

Green Factory Bavaria in Augsburg

Forschungs-, Demonstrations- und Schulungsplattform
Christian Gebbe, Johannes Glasschröder, Gunther Reinhart
The Green Factory Bavaria is a research project, in which a platform at several locations in Bavaria is developed, in order to increase the resource efficiency in manufacturing companies. The platform shall serve as research-, demonstration- and training purposes. In Augsburg a process chain was developed, which consists of an additive manufacturing step, a cleaning and a packaging step. The research foci of those areas as well as the training concept are going to be presented in this article.
Industrie 4.0 Management | Volume 33 | 2017 | Edition 1 | Pages 39-42
Situational Learning Factory

Situational Learning Factory

A socio-technical education and training approach for industrial work 4.0
Sabine T. Koeszegi, Georg Reischauer
Industrial work 4.0 challenges workers due to ambiguity, self-organization, and interconnec-tedness. To qualify workers to successfully cope with these challenges, this article introduces the software-based situational learning factory that is completed like a flight simulator. By playing these so called serious games that simulate situations on the shop floor of varying complexity, employees gain experiential knowledge and improve their IT-skills.
Industrie 4.0 Management | Volume 32 | 2016 | Edition 3 | Pages 27-30
Setup and Deployment of a Learning Factory

Setup and Deployment of a Learning Factory

Close-to-production lean trainings in the process and pharmaceutical industry
Stefan Doch, Sara Merker, Frank Straube, Daniel Roy
The sustainable implementation of efficient processes requires a corporate culture that ensures continuous optimization. In order to achieve this level of operational excellence employees’ capabilities must be developed with regard to the identification and active pursuit of improvements. For this purpose, lean management principles and tools have to be implemented at all hierarchy levels (lean thinking). In many instances, learning factories have proved to be an appropriate platform to support this process of transformation. For the first time in Germany, this concept has now been transferred to the process industry with its special requirements by realizing a learning factory within a pharmaceutical company. The procedure of planning and deploying this industry-specific learning environment with the identified success factors are discussed in this paper.
Industrie Management | Volume 31 | 2015 | Edition 3 | Pages 26-30
Contribution of Learning Factories to Industry 4.0

Contribution of Learning Factories to Industry 4.0

Ein Baustein zur vierten industriellen Revolution bei kleinen und mittelständischen Unternehmen
Mario Kleindienst, Christian Ramsauer
The term Industry 4.0 has changed from a fashionable issue to a serious research and future-topic in industrial production. Research organisations work on sophisticated technologies and concepts to implement this fourth industrial revolution, research grants are provided generously and model factories get decorated. However, many companies still cannot understand the term industry 4.0 and the related consequences on their own business. Especially small and medium sized enterprises have not understood the benefits. For that reason the currently existing learning factory at the institute of industrial management and innovation research at Graz University of Technology is enlarged to an industry 4.0 learning factory. The concept behind is the object of this article.
Industrie Management | Volume 31 | 2015 | Edition 3 | Pages 41-44
Knowledge Preservation by Using Digital Media in a Learning Factory

Knowledge Preservation by Using Digital Media in a Learning Factory

Ein neuer Ansatz zur Verringerung des Wissensverlusts hervorgerufen durch den demografischen Wandel
Dieter Kreimeier, Sebastian Freith, Carsten Ullrich
A closer look at the population pyramid shows the ongoing demographic change. The number of employees that are due to retire on account of their advanced age will increase significantly in the next years. Without further actions the knowledge and practical expertise of these experienced employees will no longer be available in the company. The preservation of the practical knowledge by the integration of digital media in an industrial production environment is subject of the article and is verified by the learning factory of the chair of production systems.
Industrie Management | Volume 31 | 2015 | Edition 3 | Pages 69-72
advanced Learning Factory (aLF)

advanced Learning Factory (aLF)

A Holistic Approach to the Development of Expertise in Response to Demographic Change
Egon Müller, Daniel Plorin, Jörg Ackermann
Increasingly complex and technology-driven markets require a broad knowledge and qualifications of professionals in manufacturing companies. The range of needs for long-term competitive knowledge adaptation is versatile. Especially in view of the forecasted lack of qualified young people, it is more important to sustainably educate existing staff. Thus it is necessary to create sustainable and innovative learning environments which provide the necessary knowledge, qualifications and skills. An adequate and consistent concept represents the advanced Learning Factory (aLF) and is discussed in this paper.
Industrie Management | Volume 29 | 2013 | Edition 3 | Pages 59-62
Skills Development and Leadership

Skills Development and Leadership

The continuous improving process in lean manufacturing systems
Eberhard Abele, Jan Cachay, Jan Wennemer
Sustainability in lean production systems arises when the relevant lean principles are addressed by preferably all stakeholders in the context of permanent improvement processes. For this purpose a skills development of all employees is necessary, even for managers, as they convey the CIP position by their people skills and set an example. If this succeeds, improvement processes will develop into a sustainable learning process, which in turn serves as a self-reinforcing factor for the further development of staff skills. An approach to skills development and to the corresponding leadership system for improvement processes is presented and supported by preliminary results of an empirical study.
Industrie Management | Volume 27 | 2011 | Edition 4 | Pages 14-18
1 2