Papers

8

Total Citations

64

H-Index

6

About

Bruce J. MacLennan is a researcher whose work spans robotics, artificial intelligence, consciousness studies, and emergent complex systems. He is perhaps best known for his pioneering investigations into programmable matter and artificial morphogenesis — drawing inspiration from embryological development to coordinate massive swarms of microscopic robots capable of assembling hierarchically complex physical structures. His 2015 paper on "The Morphogenetic Path to Programmable Matter" (18 citations) represents a landmark contribution to reconfigurable systems, while his work on coordinating robot swarms (2014, 2018) demonstrates a sustained commitment to scalable, biology-inspired engineering solutions. MacLennan has also made significant contributions to the philosophy of mind as applied to robotics, tackling the notoriously difficult "Hard Problem" of consciousness in the context of robot emotions and ethical treatment of autonomous agents. His series of papers on robot consciousness (2006, 2008, 2009, 2014) explores whether robots can possess genuine subjective experience — a question with profound ethical implications as autonomous systems grow more sophisticated. His neurally plausible model of infant reaching (2016) further illustrates his integrative approach, bridging cognitive neuroscience, embodied AI, and developmental robotics. MacLennan's interdisciplinary vision consistently pushes researchers to consider both the technical and philosophical frontiers of intelligent systems.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

6
H-Index
8
Papers
64
Total Citations
8
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
The Morphogenetic Path to Programmable Matter
18 citations · 2015
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2014 (2 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 2
🏛 Institutions: University of Tennessee at Knoxville

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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