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  • Research
    • Safety and Benchmarking
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    • Research
      • Safety and Benchmarking
      • Mobility and Navigation
      • Accessible Human-Robot Interaction
      • Autonomous and Human-Guided Manipulation
      • Smart Sensing and Embodied Intelligence
      • Telepresence and Teleoperation
      • User-Centred Design Methods
      • Ethics
    • People
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Project Vision

To facilitate the creation of a sustainable healthcare robotics eco-system connecting researchers, industry and healthcare providers, in order to build the infrastructure and systems to drive world-class advances in healthcare robotics research and development to support people living with frailty within communities in the UK.

Link to the EMERGENCE Website

About the Network

Professor Praminda Caleb-Solly at the University of Nottingham is leading a team of four other UK universities, Sheffield, Heriot-Watt, Sheffield Hallam, and Hertfordshire, who together will establish a new network, EMERGENCE. The network aims to create a robotics for healthcare community, which connects researchers, health and social care professionals, service users, regulators and policy makers, to bring about the wider use of healthcare robots to support people living with frailty in the community. 


The EMERGENCE network will explore how robots can be used to support people to better self-manage the conditions that result from frailty and, by providing information and data to healthcare practitioners, enabling more timely interventions. The EMERGENCE consortium is a world class multi-disciplinary team who bring, not only their expertise in healthcare technology research, but also innovative living lab testbeds from across the country.


The network will nurture and support a community of researchers in healthcare and robotics through pilot feasibility studies, sponsored and facilitated by the network to develop new approaches beyond the state-of-the-art. This co-designed research will lead to novel technologies capable of transforming how frailty is managed in the community. These pilots will underpin the development of larger programme grants and trials, providing the researchers involved with the basis to extend their research. 

EPSRC funded Network+ Project EP/W000741/1 EMERGENCE Healthcare Technologies Network+ 

Please contact the University of Nottingham Project Lead: Prof Praminda Caleb-Solly for further information praminda.caleb-solly@nottingham.ac.uk 

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