{"id": 1227958, "name": "Annual industrial robots installed", "unit": "robots", "createdAt": "2026-04-24T10:39:36.000Z", "updatedAt": "2026-04-24T10:39:36.000Z", "coverage": "", "timespan": "2011-2024", "datasetId": 7803, "shortUnit": "", "columnOrder": 0, "shortName": "industrial_robot_installations", "catalogPath": "grapher/artificial_intelligence/2026-04-20/ai_index/industrial_robots#industrial_robot_installations", "descriptionShort": "Industrial robots are defined by the source as automatically controlled, reprogrammable, and multipurpose machines that can move in three or more directions and perform a variety of tasks in industrial settings.", "type": "int", "grapherConfigIdETL": "019dbf12-d910-717d-9db1-077ffc9f3512", "datasetName": "AI Index Report", "updatePeriodDays": 365, "datasetVersion": "2026-04-20", "nonRedistributable": false, "display": {"unit": "robots", "numDecimalPlaces": 0}, "schemaVersion": 2, "processingLevel": "minor", "presentation": {"attribution": "International Federation of Robotics via AI Index Report (2026)", "topicTagsLinks": ["Artificial Intelligence"]}, "descriptionKey": ["Industrial robots are machines used in factories to automate tasks like welding, assembly, and packaging.", "They are defined as automatically controlled, reprogrammable, and multipurpose machines that can move in three or more directions.", "Reprogrammable means their functions can be changed through software without altering their physical parts.", "Multipurpose means they can be adapted for different tasks with mechanical changes.", "Robots are becoming easier to install and more flexible, which means even small production runs can be automated.", "Companies use robots to improve product quality, increase speed, reduce waste, and cut costs."], "dimensions": {"years": {"values": [{"id": 2011}, {"id": 2012}, {"id": 2013}, {"id": 2014}, {"id": 2015}, {"id": 2016}, {"id": 2017}, {"id": 2018}, {"id": 2019}, {"id": 2020}, {"id": 2021}, {"id": 2022}, {"id": 2023}, {"id": 2024}]}, "entities": {"values": [{"id": 171, "name": "China", "code": "CHN"}, {"id": 6, "name": "Germany", "code": "DEU"}, {"id": 14, "name": "Japan", "code": "JPN"}, {"id": 127, "name": "South Korea", "code": "KOR"}, {"id": 13, "name": "United States", "code": "USA"}, {"id": 355, "name": "World", "code": "OWID_WRL"}]}}, "origins": [{"id": 14378, "title": "AI Index Report", "description": "The AI Index Report tracks, collates, distills, and visualizes data related to artificial intelligence (AI). The mission is to provide unbiased, rigorously vetted, broadly sourced data to enable policymakers, researchers, executives, journalists, and the general public to develop a more thorough and nuanced understanding of the complex field of AI.", "producer": "AI Index Report", "citationFull": "Sha Sajadieh, Loredana Fattorini, Raymond Perrault, Yolanda Gil, Vanessa Parli, Lapo Santarlasci, Juan Pava, Nestor Maslej, Russ Altman, Erik Brynjolfsson, Carla Brodley, Jack Clark, Virginia Dignum, Vipin Kumar, James Landay, Terah Lyons, James Manyika, Juan Carlos Niebles, Yoav Shoham, Elham Tabassi, Russell Wald, Toby Walsh, Dan Weld. \u201cThe AI Index 2026 Annual Report,\u201d AI Index Steering Committee, Institute for Human-Centered AI, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, April 2026.", "attributionShort": "AI Index Report", "urlMain": "https://hai.stanford.edu/assets/files/ai_index_report_2026.pdf", "dateAccessed": "2026-04-20", "datePublished": "2026-04-13", "license": {"url": "https://hai.stanford.edu/assets/files/ai_index_report_2026.pdf", "name": "CC BY-ND 4.0"}}]}