Robert Alexander

Naval Postgraduate School

Papers

2

Total Citations

55

H-Index

2

About

Robert Alexander is a leading figure in computational geometry and path planning, with a career focused on enabling efficient navigation through complex, weighted terrains. His foundational work addresses a core challenge in robotics and geographic information systems: how to precompute the best route to a destination from any starting point. Alexander’s seminal 2000 paper, “Finding Optimal-Path Maps for Path Planning across Weighted Regions” (35 citations), introduced algorithms that construct optimal-path maps for two-dimensional polygonal terrains where different regions have varying traversal costs. This innovation eliminates the need for real-time path planning, allowing robots or people to instantly determine the fastest route. He further refined these techniques in his 2002 work on homogeneous-cost convex-polygonal regions (20 citations), providing a rigorous analysis of how to partition space and compute key point paths. By shifting the computational burden from online search to offline map construction, Alexander’s contributions have had a lasting impact on autonomous navigation, enabling more responsive and efficient systems. His research remains essential reading for students and engineers developing path-planning algorithms for real-world environments.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

2
H-Index
2
Papers
55
Total Citations
28
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Finding Optimal-Path Maps for Path Planning across Weighted Regions
35 citations · 2000
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2000 (1 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 1
🏛 Institutions: Naval Postgraduate School

Top Papers

  1. 1
  2. 2

Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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