About

Reid Simmons is a pioneering roboticist whose work spans autonomous navigation, multi-robot coordination, and social human-robot interaction. Based at Carnegie Mellon University, he has made foundational contributions that continue to shape modern robotics research. Simmons fundamentally advanced how robots navigate and map unknown environments. His work on probabilistic navigation using partially observable Markov models (1995, 488 citations) established rigorous frameworks for robust robot localization, while his curvature-velocity method for obstacle avoidance (527 citations) provided elegant solutions for real-time mobile robot operation. His landmark papers on collaborative multi-robot exploration (760 citations) and multi-robot mapping coordination (496 citations) defined the field of distributed robotic systems, offering practical algorithms still widely referenced today. Beyond navigation, Simmons broke new ground in social robotics through Valerie the roboceptionist at Carnegie Mellon — a long-term study in human-robot social dynamics (402 citations). His investigations into robot expressiveness, attention, and affective behavior helped establish the scientific foundations of socially intelligent machines. His structured control architectures and task description languages further demonstrate his breadth, giving robots the cognitive scaffolding needed to manage complex, real-world tasks. With multiple papers exceeding 400 citations, Simmons remains an essential figure for any student entering autonomous systems or human-robot interaction research.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

52
H-Index
185
Papers
11,291
Total Citations
61
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Collaborative multi-robot exploration
760 citations · 2002
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2002 (24 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 225
🏛 Institutions: Carnegie Mellon University, University of Pittsburgh, Robotics Research (United States), U.S. National Science Foundation

Top Papers

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    Affective social robots
    251 citations · 2009

Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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