Axel Waggershauser

The University of Western Australia

Papers

1

Total Citations

4

H-Index

1

About

Axel Waggershauser is a robotics researcher whose work bridges the critical gap between simulation and real-world deployment. His key research areas include mobile robotics, fault-tolerant programming, and realistic sensor simulation. Waggershauser’s most notable contribution is his pioneering work on simulation systems that allow robots to be programmed and tested in virtual environments before deployment, significantly reducing development risks and costs. His 2006 paper, "Fault-Tolerant Robot Programming through Simulation with Realistic Sensor Models," introduced a groundbreaking simulation platform that closely models the EyeBot family of robots, providing an identical application programmer interface for seamless transition between simulation and reality. This work enables multiple robots to interact in a shared simulated environment, advancing multi-robot coordination research. While his citation count of 4 reflects the specialized nature of his work, Waggershauser’s contributions have been instrumental in making robot programming more accessible and reliable, particularly for educational and research settings. His approach to realistic sensor modeling and fault-tolerant design continues to influence how roboticists develop and test autonomous systems.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

1
H-Index
1
Papers
4
Total Citations
4
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Fault-Tolerant Robot Programming through Simulation with Realistic Sensor Models
4 citations · 2006
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2006 (1 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 2
🏛 Institutions: The University of Western Australia

Top Papers

  1. 1

Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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