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20 August 2019 News Release

[Music plays and image appears of a close-up of an object being scanned and then the image changes to show a CSIRO Data 61 Mixed Reality Lab sign on a wall]

[Image changes to show the Mixed Reality Lab and the camera pans around the room]

Narrator: At CSIRO’s Data61 our new Mixed Reality Lab in Melbourne is at the forefront of digital twin technology.

[Images move through to show a male taking a photo, a large computer operating, a male wearing goggles, a scanned 3-D image, a doctor looking at an x-ray on a screen, a hand operating a touch pad]

A virtual model of a physical process or object, digital twins have the potential to transform industries including manufacturing, health and agriculture

[Image changes to show a scanned image of a city and the camera pans over the diagram]

and even change the way we design our cities and infrastructure.

[Images move through of various cameras and sensing equipment and then the image changes to show two males holding up a physical object and then the image changes to show the scanned object]

The Mixed Reality Lab houses a state of the art set up of optical cameras and sensing equipment to capture detailed information about a physical object to create its digital twin in a matter of minutes.

[Image changes to show various pieces of equipment on a table and then the image changes to show the scanned images of the equipment]

The technology can be tailored to multiple applications to automatically validate components or processes.

[Image changes to show Lachlan Hetherton talking to the camera and text appears: Mr Lachlan Hetherton, Senior Software Engineer, CSIRO’s Data61]

Lachlan Hetherton: Really the Mixed Reality Lab is able to be applied to a huge number of domains

[Images move through to show Lachlan looking at a pair of computer screens, 3-D printed plastic products, a 3-D printer in operation, and a male walking through a crop in a field]

and we looked at industries like health and bio-security, agriculture.

[Image changes to show Lachlan talking to the camera again and then images move through of various people being scanned as they move]

You could detect objects, you could do things like detect strains on the human body using visual analytics.

[Images move through of a scanned image of a wheel, people being scanned while they are moving, Lachlan working on a computer, and two males looking at a computer screen and talking]

Narrator: Digital twins of manufacturing processes, human movement, and cities and infrastructure will significantly improve productivity, reduce costs and transform all manner of industries.

[Image changes to show Matt Bolger talking to the camera and text appears: Mr Matt Bolger, Senior Software Engineer, CSIRO’s Data 61]

Matt Bolger: I think we’re only scratching the surface on where we can take some of this.

[Music plays and a honeycomb background pattern and the CSIRO, and Data61 logos and text appears: Creating our Data Drive Future, www.data61.csiro.au]

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The lab will enable manufacturing and other industries to create 'digital twins', or virtual replicas of physical objects and systems.

By 2020, the International Data Corporation (IDC) estimates 30 per cent of the top 2000 global companies will be using data from Digital Twins of Internet of Things (IoT) connected assets to improve product innovation success rates and organisational productivity, achieving gains of up to 25 per cent.

The Mixed Reality Lab houses a set-up of industrial and consumer optical cameras and sensing equipment to capture detailed information about a physical object and the space surrounding it.

The equipment is underpinned by sophisticated algorithms which merge the enormous amounts of data collected to create a digital twin in a matter of minutes.

Matt Bolger, senior software engineer at CSIRO's Data61, said the lab is a unique combination of Data61's research expertise across machine learning, computer vision, computational modelling, IoT, and CSIRO's patented Stereo Depth Fusion technology for depth estimation.

"This technology is game-changing for manufacturing and other industries.

"By comparing a digital twin of a manufactured object against the original design, we can quickly, accurately and cost-effectively identify defects and map entire manufacturing processes across a global supply chain.

"Defective components can be identified in real-time and corrected, while downstream processes can be adjusted to minimise the impact of delays," Mr Bolger said.

Dr Simon Barry, Analytics and Decision Sciences research director at CSIRO's Data61 said the Mixed Reality Lab is an example of the Fourth Industrial Revolution in action, the blurring of the lines between the physical, digital and biological spheres.

"This is the future of smart factories, where the digitalisation of the full value chain will enable real-time situational awareness and lead to better decision making and planning," Dr Barry said.

"Digital twins of manufacturing processes, human movement and even our cities and infrastructure will significantly improve productivity, reduce costs and transform all manner of industries," he said.

Minister for Industry, Science and Technology Karen Andrews said the Mixed Reality Lab is a prime example of how technology can create new value in a vital sector of the economy.

"Taking up technologies, like digital twins and augmented reality, can improve productivity and strengthen our competitive advantage in a global value chain.

"A thriving manufacturing sector is part of our government's plan to grow the economy and create 1.25 million new jobs over the next five years," Minister Andrews said.

The Mixed Reality Lab can be scaled depending on the size of the object being scanned.

It can be tailored to applications across health, agriculture, mining and other industries to automatically validate a component or process.

"Our technology can also be applied to humans to analyse their movement, using deep learning and biomechanical modelling," Mr Bolger said.

"This could help elite athletes improve their performance and reduce workplace injuries."

Researchers are exploring the use of augmented reality technology to allow, for example, workers on a factory floor to spot a defective object and identify where it deviates from specifications.

The Mixed Reality Lab is underpinned by Workspace, a powerful scientific application development platform, created by CSIRO's Data61.

Visit Mixed Reality Lab for more information.

Images

An object being scanned using CSIROs patented stereo depth fusion technology for depth estimation.
Matt Bolger Senior Software Engineer from CSIROs Data61 at the Mixed Reality Lab.
Infographic: Mixed Reality Lab - how does it work?
Digital Human - the teams technology can also be applied to humans to analyse their movement using deep learning and biomechanical modelling.
Damien Watkins CSIROs Data61 Research Team Leader at the Mixed Reality Lab.

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