Auflistung nach Autor:in "Piller, Frank T."
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- KonferenzbeitragModelling Human Factors in Cyber Physical Production Systems by the Integration of Human Digital Shadows(Modellierung 2022 Satellite Events, 2022) Mertens, Alexander; Brauner, Philipp; Baier, Ralph; Brillowski, Florian; Dammers, Hannah; Van Dyck, Marc; Kong, Iris; Königs, Peter; Kordtomeikel, Frauke; Liehner, Gian Luca; Pütz, Sebastian; Rodemann, Niklas; Schaar, Anne Kathrin; Steuer-Dankert, Linda; Vervier, Luisa; Wlecke, Shari; Gries, Thomas; Leicht-Scholten, Carmen; Nagel, Saskia K.; Piller, Frank T.; Schuh, Günther; Ziefle, Martina; Nitsch, VerenaThe future of industrial manufacturing and production will increasingly manifest in the form of cyber-physical production systems. Here, Digital Shadows will act as mediators between the physical and digital world to model and operationalize the interactions and relationships between different entities in production systems. Until now, the associated concepts have been primarily pursued and implemented from a technocentric perspective, in which human actors play a subordinate role, if they are considered at all. This paper outlines an anthropocentric approach that explicitly considers the characteristics, behavior, and traits and states of human actors in socio-technical production systems. For this purpose, we discuss the potentials and the expected challenges and threats of creating and using Human Digital Shadows in production.
- ZeitschriftenartikelVon Massenproduktion zu Co-Produktion Kunden als Wertschöpfungspartner(Wirtschaftsinformatik: Vol. 45, No. 5, 2003) Reichwald, Ralf; Piller, Frank T.The idea of integrating users into the design and production processes is a promising strategy for companies being forced to react to the growing individualization of demand. Many of the new models of industrial value creation refer to customer integration as a distinctive principle. The paper argues that modern information technologies play an important part to implement customer centric structures in mass markets. The combination of flexible manufacturing with modern interaction technologies allows only today to fulfill many of the promises that were discussed in the CIM context already decades ago. The objective of this paper is to lay a foundation for creating modern, customer orientated manufacturing concepts by dedicated information systems and processes. After discussing some new forms of value creation in manufacturing, we identify information structures and processes for customer integration. The paper ends with an agenda for further research from a business informatics perspective.