About

Antonio Chella is a pioneering Italian researcher whose work sits at the fascinating intersection of cognitive robotics, artificial consciousness, and human-robot interaction. Based at the University of Palermo, Chella has dedicated his career to some of the most profound questions in robotics: Can machines become self-aware? Can robots be trusted as social partners? How can robotic systems serve vulnerable human populations? His foundational contributions include developing cognitive architectures for robot self-consciousness and imitation learning, and exploring how conceptual spaces can anchor symbolic reasoning to dynamic real-world scenarios — work that has shaped how researchers think about machine perception and representation. His 2009 "Machine Consciousness Manifesto" boldly framed artificial consciousness not merely as a technical goal but as a new scientific paradigm, accumulating over 50 citations. More recently, his research on inner speech as a pathway to robot self-awareness (69 citations) has opened genuinely novel territory in cognitive robotics. Chella's work also carries profound humanitarian weight: his team demonstrated that locked-in ALS patients could control a humanoid robot through brain-computer interfaces to perform everyday tasks, a study cited over 90 times. With nearly 700 total citations across his most recognized papers alone, Chella's scholarship bridges philosophy, neuroscience, and engineering with rare ambition and human purpose.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

27
H-Index
141
Papers
2,071
Total Citations
15
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Would a robot trust you? Developmental robotics model of trust and theory of mind
107 citations · 2019
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2008 (10 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 155
🏛 Institutions: University of Palermo, Institute for High Performance Computing and Networking, National Research Council, Institute for Biomedical Research and Innovation, Robotics Research (United States)

Top Papers

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    Understanding dynamic scenes
    76 citations · 2000
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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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