ICT-26-2016

System abilities, development and pilot installations -

⚫ indicates current topic
Node background color indicates the call topic status
Double click on a topic to center information around it.
Node size is proportional to distance from the current topic

About the connections

The graph above was generated based on the following links

  • ICT-23-2014
    Robotics

    MOTIVATION ICT-26 deals with multiple-actor systems

  • Update link information
    Be aware that editing a link text will make it have to pass to quality control again before it will be publicly visible (unless you are an admin)
    Type
    Motivation NCP (only) comment
  • ICT-24-2015
    Robotics

    MOTIVATION ICT-26 deals with multiple-actor systems

  • Update link information
    Be aware that editing a link text will make it have to pass to quality control again before it will be publicly visible (unless you are an admin)
    Type
    Motivation NCP (only) comment
  • DT-ICT-02-2018
    Robotics - Digital Innovation Hubs (DIH)

    MOTIVATION Links will also be created with those Innovation Actions previously funded under ICT-26 that intented to build complex robotic systems and produce experiments by means of cascade funding

  • Update link information
    Be aware that editing a link text will make it have to pass to quality control again before it will be publicly visible (unless you are an admin)
    Type
    Motivation NCP (only) comment
  • ICT-10-2019-2020
    Robotics Core Technology

    MOTIVATION system ability level, performance characterisation

  • Update link information
    Be aware that editing a link text will make it have to pass to quality control again before it will be publicly visible (unless you are an admin)
    Type
    Motivation NCP (only) comment
  • ICT-48-2020
    Towards a vibrant European network of AI excellence centres

    MOTIVATION Robotics is one of the technology focus areas of the AI excellence center call.

  • Update link information
    Be aware that editing a link text will make it have to pass to quality control again before it will be publicly visible (unless you are an admin)
    Type
    Motivation NCP (only) comment

Call text (as on F&T portal)

View on F&T portal
Specific Challenge:

RAS operate through the integration of a wide range of different technologies, as noted above. In addition to the contribution of each of these technologies, it is also important to characterise the overall performance of an RAS in terms of its ability to perform system functions which traverse specific technological capabilities. The specific challenge here is to increase the system ability levels in terms of configurability, adaptability, motion, manipulation, decisional autonomy, dependability, interaction, perception and cognitive ability. Such system abilities provide a basis for setting performance metrics and for specifying desired levels of system performance. Reaching higher ability levels than currently available allows to advance the state of the art and to set future targets for robotic systems.

Multiple-actor systems are composed of many actors who are able to operate independently but together can perform system functions. These actors may be autonomous entities, people, or static systems, including embedded sensor networks and cloud services, working together in the operational environment. The challenge is to develop complete, robust systems through the interaction of these many actors to carry out the system function.

Integrated sets of common tool chains and real-world test installations are increasingly needed to support the development of complex robotics systems. The challenge resides in the need for open development and dissemination of common development tools and the provision of wide access to realistic testing environments for the end user community, especially SMEs. Robot testing and innovation facilities are starting to emerge in Europe but are underdeveloped in terms of their infrastructure and the facilities they offer.

Scope

a. Research and Innovation Actions on system abilities

Research & Innovation Actions will focus on advancing the state of the art in the level of smart robotics system abilities. The focus is on the technical challenges; research actions will address cross cutting technology issues that will make a significant contribution to the needs of applications and domains with the highest impact on markets. Proposals are expected to address at least one or a combination of the following prioritised abilities: robot dependability, social interaction ability and cognitive ability.

The Commission considers that System ability proposals requesting a contribution from the EU of between EUR 2 and 4 million would allow this area to be addressed appropriately. Nonetheless, this does not preclude submission and selection of proposals requesting other amounts. At least one action will be supported within system abilities.

b. Research and Innovation Actions on multiple-actor systems:

This action focuses on developing advanced multiple-actor systems utilising actors which can operate individually, as members of a team and within a network of other assets in semi-structured, unstructured, dynamic or harsh environments. The system operates through the interaction of diverse independent actors and needs to be robust against errors or the inaction of any specific actor. Proposed multiple-actor systems are expected to demonstrate autonomy over an extended time scale and clearly identify service level gains (compared with current systems) in the application area chosen by the proposal. Systems must be built around identified end user needs and performance should be measured using relevant end user metrics.

The Commission considers that Multiple-actor proposals requesting a contribution from the EU of between EUR 2 and 7 million would allow this area to be addressed appropriately. Nonetheless, this does not preclude submission and selection of proposals requesting other amounts. At least one action will be supported within multiple-actor systems.

c. Innovation Actions on systems development technology:

The action will address the open development and dissemination of integrated sets of tool chains and building-block applications which support the construction of complex robotics systems. This will result in a European-level ecosystem of development tools using commonly agreed ways of describing robot systems and system building blocks and their interaction. The ecosystem should be flexible and able to accommodate a diverse range of end application requirements in a broad range of different domains. Proposals must aim at developing such an ecosystem, provide mechanisms for its dissemination and stimulate community engagement in its development and subsequent deployment.

Key to the success of this action will be support for modularity, composability[1], re-usability, ease of use and the adoption of existing and emerging standards within both the system and its components. The action is also expected to build on existing systems and structures.

The action may involve financial support to third parties in line with the conditions set out in Part K of the General Annexes. The consortium will define the selection process of additional users and suppliers for which financial support will be granted (typically in the order of EUR 50.000 – 250.000[2] per party). Minimum 50% of the EU funding requested by the proposal should be allocated to the purpose of financial support to third parties.[3]

The Commission considers that System development tools proposals requesting a contribution from the EU of between EUR 5 and 8 million would allow this area to be addressed appropriately. Nonetheless, this does not preclude submission and selection of proposals requesting other amounts. At least one action will be supported within systems development technology.

d. Innovation Actions on pilot installations for robot testing:

The action will develop and deploy access mechanisms and supporting infrastructure for single-site[4] pilot installations outside the laboratory for robot testing, based on the needs of end users. Proposals will build on an installation supported through existing EU, regional, national or commercial funding to develop a European accessible facility prioritised against emerging market domains and application areas. In order to ensure real-world conditions, these pilot installations will be based on existing infrastructures such as farms, hospitals / care homes, mines, nuclear sites, undersea sites, collapsed buildings etc. The proposed access mechanisms and infrastructure should provide a low access threshold for SMEs, public bodies and research organisations.

Proposals are expected to provide a support infrastructure including as a minimum: instrumentation of the site; simulation support to allow off-site testing; access to the end user and local site experts, and metrics relating to the functional goals of the end user. The proposal should also address safety certification processes, the development of appropriate performance evaluation measures and application-specific benchmarks. The proposal should identify application-relevant standards and, where relevant, the types of human interaction expected, including the level of social interaction.

Where appropriate, proposals should consider providing sharable standard platforms (hardware and software) to allow organisations offering individual modules or technologies to access the site, rather than limiting access to groups able to deliver whole systems.

Proposals should clearly show how they will assess and, where appropriate, disseminate the results and market impact from trials carried out on the installation. Proposals are encouraged to highlight how deployed system dependability can be enhanced through interaction with the installation.

The action may involve financial support to third parties in line with the conditions set out in Part K of the General Annexes. The consortium will define the selection process of additional users and suppliers running the experiments to access the installation for which financial support will be granted (typically in the order of EUR 50.000 – 150.000[2] per party). Minimum 60% of the EU funding requested by the proposal should be allocated to the purpose of financial support to third parties. Third party support is expected to cover the development of end user solutions for use at the pilot installation as well as the development of related service-side support that would enable the deployment of the end user application.[3]

The Commission considers that Pilot installation proposals requesting a contribution from the EU of between EUR 7 and 10 million would allow this area to be addressed appropriately. Nonetheless, this does not preclude submission and selection of proposals requesting other amounts. At least one action will be supported within pilot installations for robot testing.

Expected Impact:

The expected impacts for the RIA in system abilities are:

  • Verifiable increase in the level of system abilities of value in the targeted application domains, in particular improving the innovativeness, robustness and longevity of operations of robots deployed in challenging environments

The expected impacts for the RIA on multiple-actor systems are:

  • Contribution to the development of innovative multiple-actor systems which achieve measurable service level gains in new application areas
  • Measurable improvements in the provision of autonomy over an extended time scale from the current state of the art in the chosen application
  • Advances in the development and understanding of new metrics characterising the operation of multiple-actor systems.

The expected impacts of system development tools actions are:

  • Enhanced productivity of RAS through high quality tools
  • Wide acceptance of new, efficient and flexible system development tools across the development community and in the marketplace.

The expected impacts of pilot installation actions are:

  • Improved understanding of current technology capability limits in real world situations, to promote higher take-up of new robotics systems and to achieve faster time-to-market for new applications.
  • Characterisations of the performance of robotics systems in the given installation.
Cross-cutting Priorities:

Contractual Public-Private Partnerships (cPPPs)Robotics

[1]Composability is defined as the ability to combine and recombine building blocks to fulfill different functions. Building blocks may be at different levels of granularity ranging from components to systems of systems. Composability applies to all aspects of the design and development of systems.

[2]In line with Article 23 (7) of the Rules for Participation the amounts referred to in Article 137 of the Financial Regulation may be exceeded, and if this is the case proposals should explain why this is necessary to achieve the objectives of the action.

[3]It is recommended to also use established networks reaching out to SMEs like the Enterprise Europe Network and the NCP network for calls publications and awareness raising towards SME's.

[4]“Single Site” refers to the need for the site to be fully self-contained and aligned to a specific existing asset. Proposals may cover multiple assets at different geographic locations but each must be a single site asset.

[5]In line with Article 23 (7) of the Rules for Participation the amounts referred to in Article 137 of the Financial Regulation may be exceeded, and if this is the case proposals should explain why this is necessary to achieve the objectives of the action.

[6]It is recommended to also use established networks reaching out to SMEs like the Enterprise Europe Network and the NCP network for calls publications and awareness raising towards SME's.

News flashes

2017-08-11

An overview of the evaluation results (called 'CallFlash Info') of the topics of the H2020-ICT_2017-1call is now available under the section Topic conditions and documents - additional documents of each relevant topic.

2017-08-11

An overview of the evaluation results (called 'Flash Call Info') of the topics of the H2020-ICT_2017-1call is now available here

2017-05-22
The submission session is now available for: ICT-42-2017(FPA)
2017-04-28

The submission of proposals to the 18 topics of this H2020-ICT-2017 call closed on 25 April 2017. A total of995 proposals were submitted in response to these topics. Please find below the breakdown per topic and type of action:

Topic RIA IA CSAPCP TOTALICT-05-2017 52 2 54ICT-11-2017 103 9 112ICT-14-2016-2017 44 44ICT-15-2016-2017 18 18ICT-16-2017 7676ICT-17-2016-2017 3 3ICT-20-2017115 115ICT-23-201777 7 84ICT-25-2016-2017 83 48131ICT-27-2017 35 2 3 40ICT-28-2017 88ICT-30-201752 271 80ICT-31-201743 61 50ICT-32-2017 5115 66ICT-33-2017 10 10ICT-39-2016-2017 7171ICT-40-2017 5 5ICT-41-2017 28 28TOTAL536 37779 3 995

2017-03-17

An overview of the evaluation results (called 'Flash Call Info') of the H2020-ICT-2016-2 call is now available under the 'Topic conditions & documents' section on the topic pages of topics ICT-04, ICT-07, ICT-08, ICT-09 and ICT-19.

2016-12-08
The submission session is now available for: ICT-32-2017(IA), ICT-31-2017(IA), ICT-40-2017(CSA), ICT-14-2016-2017(IA), ICT-41-2017(CSA), ICT-15-2016-2017(IA), ICT-20-2017(RIA), ICT-17-2016-2017(RIA), ICT-16-2017(RIA), ICT-11-2017(IA), ICT-33-2017(CSA), ICT-32-2017(CSA), ICT-23-2017(IA), ICT-31-2017(CSA), ICT-30-2017(CSA), ICT-28-2017(CSA), ICT-30-2017(IA), ICT-05-2017(RIA), ICT-27-2017(PCP), ICT-23-2017(RIA), ICT-31-2017(RIA), ICT-30-2017(RIA), ICT-25-2016-2017(IA), ICT-27-2017(IA), ICT-11-2017(CSA), ICT-25-2016-2017(RIA), ICT-05-2017(CSA), ICT-27-2017(RIA), ICT-39-2016-2017(IA)
2016-11-10

The submission of proposals to the5 topicsof this H2020-ICT-2016-2 call closed on8 November 2016. A total of264 proposals were submitted in response to these topics. Please find below the breakdown per topic and type of action:

Topic CSA RIA IA TotalICT-04 7 19 26ICT-075 72 77ICT-08 8 16 24ICT-09 52 52ICT-19 9 75 85

2016-11-10

The submission of proposals to the5 topicsof this call closed on8 November 2016. A total of264 proposals were submitted in response to these topics. Please find below the breakdown per topic and type of action:

Topic CSA RIA IA TotalICT-04 7 19 26ICT-075 72 77ICT-08 816 24ICT-09 52 52ICT-19 9 75 85

2016-08-08

An overview of the evaluation results (flash call info) for the all topics from call H2020-ICT-2016 -1 that closed on 12 April 2016 is now available here or under the ‘Topic conditions & documents’ section on each topic page.

2016-05-10
The submission session is now available for: ICT-08-2017(RIA), ICT-19-2017(IA), ICT-09-2017(RIA), ICT-07-2017(RIA), ICT-04-2017(CSA), ICT-08-2017(IA), ICT-19-2017(CSA), ICT-04-2017(IA), ICT-07-2017(CSA)
2016-04-15

Submission of proposals to 20 topics in this callclosed on 12April 2016. A total of1080 proposals were submitted in response to these topics. The breakdown per topic and type of action is as follows:

Topic CSA RIAIA PCP TotalICT-013 73 76ICT-02 34 7 41ICT-032 75 77ICT-06 87 17 104ICT-10 90 90ICT-12115 1127ICT-13 4 14 18ICT-14 40 40ICT-15 14 14ICT-17 2 2ICT-18 4 31 35ICT-21 33 33ICT-22 94 48 142ICT-24 9595ICT-25 75 39 114ICT-26 49 6 55ICT-29 7 59 5 71ICT-34 5 5ICT-35 18 18ICT-36 16 7 23Total 39 714 322 5 1080

2016-01-26

Submission of proposals to topics ICT-37-2016,ICT-38-2016and ICT-39-2016closed on 19 January 2016. A total of12 proposals were submitted in response to these 3 topics. The breakdown per topic and type of action is as follows:

CSA RIA TotalICT-37-2016 4 4ICT-38-2016 3 2 5ICT-39-2016 3 3Total 10 2 12

2015-10-20
The submission session is now available for: ICT-38-2016(CSA), ICT-39-2016-2017(CSA), ICT-38-2016(RIA), ICT-37-2016(CSA)
call topic details
Call status: Closed
Publication date: 2015-10-14 (9 years ago)
Opening date: 2015-10-20 (9 years ago)
Closing date: 2016-04-12 (9 years ago)
Procedure: single-stage

Budget: 18000000
Expected grants: not specified
News flashes

This call topic has been appended 13 times by the EC with news.

  • 2017-08-11
    an overview of the evaluation results (c...
  • 2017-08-11
    an overview of the evaluation results (c...
  • 2017-05-22
    the submission session is now available...
  • 2017-04-28
    the submission of proposals to the 18 to...
  • 2017-03-17
    an overview of the evaluation results (c...
  • 2016-12-08
    the submission session is now available...
  • 2016-11-10
    the submission of proposals to the5 topi...
  • 2016-11-10
    the submission of proposals to the5 topi...
  • 2016-08-08
    an overview of the evaluation results (f...
  • 2016-05-10
    the submission session is now available...
  • 2016-04-15
    submission of proposals to 20 topics in...
  • 2016-01-26
    submission of proposals to topics ict-37...
  • 2015-10-20
    the submission session is now available...
Source information

Showing the latest information. Found 1 version of this call topic in the F&T portal.

Information from

  • 2024-03-30_14-24-45

Annotations (will be publicly visible when approved)

You must be logged in to add annotations
No annotations yet

Events

This is just a very first implementation, better visualisation coming

Events are added by the ideal-ist NCP community and are hand-picked. If you would like to suggest an event, please contact idealist@ffg.at.

Call topic timeline

What phase of the topic timeline are we in? This timeline contains some suggestions on what are realistic actions you should or could take at this moment. The timeline is based on the information provided by the call topic.
  1. Work programme available

    - 9 years ago

    The call topics are published first in the Work Programme, which is available a while before the call opens. By following up the Work Programme publications, you can get a headstart.

  2. Publication date

    - 9 years ago

    The call was published on the Funding & Tenders Portal.

  3. Opening date

    - 9 years ago

    The call opened for submissions.

  4. Closing date

    - 9 years ago

    Deadline for submitting a project.

  5. Time to inform applicants Estimate

    - 8 years ago

    The maximum time to inform applicants (TTI) of the outcome of the evaluation is five months from the call closure date.

  6. Sign grant agreement Estimate

    - 8 years ago

    The maximum time to sign grant agreements (TTG) is three months from the date of informing applicants.

  7. Today

Funded Projects

Loading...

Project information comes from CORDIS (for Horizon 2020 and Horizon Europe) and will be sourced from F&T Portal (for Digital Europe projects)