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Centre for Tactile Internet with Human-in-the-Loop (CeTI)
Research typeInterdisciplinary
Field of research
Tactile Internet, human-machine interaction
Staffapprox. 90
LocationDresden, Germany
Websitehttps://ceti.one/ci/



The Centre for Tactile Internet with Human-in-the-Loop (CeTI) of TU Dresden, founded in 2019, aims to catapult the cooperation between man and machine to new heights. In the future, people should be able to interact in real time with interconnected, automated systems in both the real and virtual worlds. At the Cluster of Excellence CeTI, scientists from the fields of electrical engineering, communication technology, computer science, psychology, neuroscience and medicine are working together with researchers from TU Munich, the German Aerospace Center, the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft, as well as international scientific institutions, to pursue this goal. They take an interdisciplinary approach to investigating key areas of human and communication networks. The research forms the basis for novel applications in medicine, industry (Industry 4.0, Co-working) and the "Internet of Skills"(Education, rehabilitation).

The success of digitalisation continues resolutely, while devices and processes become ever more interconnected. In the foreseeable future, our daily lives will be shaped by robotic support. The scientists in the Cluster of Excellence CeTI at TU Dresden want to actively influence this transition, thereby establishing Dresden as a recognised research hub in this promising field of the future.

Objectives of CeTI

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Structural objectives:

  • Establishing the Centre for the Tactile Internet with Human-in the Loop (CeTI) in Dresden to carry out world-class research to lead the scientific field of integrated human-machine co-habitations, and to decisively advance the current state of knowledge and applications of the Tactile Internet.
  • Democratising the access to skills and expertise to promote equity for people of different genders, ages, cultural backgrounds, and physical limitations.
  • Communicating with and engage the general public about the fundamental changes and opportunities that the novel technological as well as scientific developments in CeTI will bring for individuals and societies in the medical, industrial educational, and daily-life contexts.
  • Recruiting and training national and international young talents to foster their career development, and promote equal-opportunity practices in research and teaching.

Research objectives:

  • Modelling and predicting human goal-directed behaviour, which entails flexible, and dynamic interactions between sensation, multisensory perception, cognition, and action in contexts.
  • Producing wearable peripherals for fast sensing and actuating with multimodal haptic feedback for human perception, cognition, and action based on ultra-small, bendable, stretchable, and ultra-low-power electronic circuits that precisely localise humans and objects in real-time.
  • Developing completely softwarised network solutions for wireless and wired communication that provide low latency, resilience, and security to enable human-machine co operation.
  • Providing an integrated framework that leverages the effects of continuous, mutual adaptive learning between humans and machines. Tune explanation facilities towards the demands and objectives of the human user. Assess boundary conditions and benefits for skill acquisition and training.
  • Delivering a secure and scalable computing infrastructure that enables intuitive haptic interaction and automatically adapts to changes in task contexts and world models.
  • Providing novel coding and compression methods, such as haptic codecs that take into consideration human factors, compressed sensing, and network coding to enable a combined control and communication system.

Research Areas

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  • Medicine
  • Industry
  • Internet of Skills
  • Haptic Codecs
  • Intelligent Networks
  • Augmented Perception
  • Co-Adaptation
  • Humans
  • Sensors and Actuators
  • Communication
  • Flexible Electronics
  • Tactile Computing

Scientists involved

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Principal and associated investigators: M. Ercan Altinsoy, Uwe Aßmann, Christel Baier, Karlheinz Bock, Chokri Cherif, Raimund Dachselt, Frank Ellinger, Gerhard P. Fettweis, Christof Fetzer, Frank H. P. Fitzek, Diana Göhringer, Sami Haddadin, Stefan J. Kiebel, Shu-Chen Li, Christian G. Mayr, Susanne Narciss, Christian Ott, Sebastian Pannasch, Christian Scheunert, Stefanie Speidel, Eckehard Steinbach, Thorsten Strufe, Uwe Vogel, Jürgen Weitz, Thomas Goschke, Stefan Gumhold, Jens Krzywinski, Meryem Simsek, Katharina von Kriegstein.

Associated investigators (external): Mischa Dohler, Adam Gazzaley, Muriel Médard, Martin Reisslein, Carsten Rother, Gene Tsudik, Yon Visell.

CeTI Team Members: Xin An, Riccardo Bassoli, Tina Bobbe, Philippa R. C. Böhnke, Diego Hidalgo Carvajal, Annika Dix, Clemens Dubslaff, Sebastian Ebert, Hans Georg Engler, Daniel Ernst, Sonja Groß, Dominik Grzelak, Başak Güleçyüz, Simon Hanisch, Ardhi Putra Pratama Hartono, Thomas Hulin, Matthias Jobst, Kaan Karan, Stefan Köpsell, Simone Lenk, Tianfang Lin, Chen Lingyun, Andrew Lonnstrom, Lisa-Marie Lüneburg, Helmuth Morath, Evelyn Muschter, Anindya Nag, Giang T. Nguyen, Andreas Noll, Luca Oppici, Andreas Peetz, Xue-Rui Peng, Ariel Podlubne, Felix Quirmbach, Sebastian Rettlinger, Darío Cuevas Rivera, Dominik Rivoir, Pablo Alvarez Romeo, Robert Rosenkranz, Andrés Villamil Sanchez, Harsimran Singh, Andreas Traßl, Máté Tömösközi, Gesche Vigh, Jens Wagner, Dennis Walter, Lisa Weidmüller, Florian Wieczorek, Patrick Wienhöft, Hans Winger, Ran Yin, Tobias Zerger, Jiajing Zhang, Sandra Zimmermann.

Website and Social Media

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