通过自我维护自动化护理,实现实验室自动化

IF 6.2 Q1 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Koji Ochiai, Yuya Tahara-Arai, Akari Kato, Kazunari Kaizu, Hirokazu Kariyazaki, Makoto Umeno, Koichi Takahashi, Genki N. Kanda and Haruka Ozaki
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引用次数: 0

摘要

随着各种仪器和人工智能(AI)技术的发展,生命科学和化学实验的自动化有了显著的进步。然而,实现完全的实验室自动化,即科学家设想的实验在自动化实验室中无缝执行,仍然是一个挑战。我们认为计划和操作任务(关键的人工管理过程统称为“护理”)缺乏自动化是一个主要障碍。自动化护理是实现实验室全面自动化的关键因素。为了解决这个问题,我们提出了自我维护性(SeM)的概念:实验室系统自主适应内部和外部干扰,保持运行就绪的能力。这种能力的灵感来自于活细胞的内稳态、弹性、自主状态识别和适应性。sem支持的实验室具有对其状态的自主识别,动态资源和信息管理以及对意外情况的自适应响应的特点。这将实验工作流程的计划和执行,包括调度和试剂分配,从人类转移到系统。我们提出了一个概念框架,用于实现支持sem的实验室,包括三个模块——需求管理器、实验室软件管理器和设备管理器——以及一个中央管理器。意识到SeM的实验室设计不仅使科学家能够无缝地执行设想的实验,而且还为开发人员提供了驱动完全自动化所需的技术创新的设计概念。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Automating care by self-maintainability for full laboratory automation

Automating care by self-maintainability for full laboratory automation

The automation of experiments in life sciences and chemistry has significantly advanced with the development of various instruments and artificial intelligence (AI) technologies. However, achieving full laboratory automation, where experiments conceived by scientists are seamlessly executed in automated laboratories, remains a challenge. We identify the lack of automation in planning and operational tasks—critical human-managed processes collectively termed “care”—as a major barrier. Automating care is the key enabler for full laboratory automation. To address this, we propose the concept of self-maintainability (SeM): the ability of a laboratory system to autonomously adapt to internal and external disturbances, maintaining operational readiness. This ability is inspired by the homeostasis, resilience, autonomous state recognition, and adaptability seen in living cells. A SeM-enabled laboratory features autonomous recognition of its state, dynamic resource and information management, and adaptive responses to unexpected conditions. This shifts the planning and execution of experimental workflows, including scheduling and reagent allocation, from humans to the system. We present a conceptual framework for implementing SeM-enabled laboratories, comprising three modules—Requirement manager, Labware manager, and Device manager—and a Central manager. A laboratory design that is aware of SeM not only enables scientists to execute envisioned experiments seamlessly but also provides developers with a design concept that drives the technological innovations needed for full automation.

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CiteScore
2.80
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