About

Koh Hosoda is a pioneering roboticist whose work spans cognitive developmental robotics, visual servoing, soft robotics, and biologically inspired locomotion systems. He is perhaps best known for his foundational contributions to cognitive developmental robotics (CDR), a field exploring how higher cognitive functions emerge through physical embodiment and developmental processes — work that has garnered over 546 citations and profoundly shaped how researchers think about machine cognition. His 2002 paper on Jacobian-free visual servoing (345 citations) demonstrated that robots could achieve sophisticated visual control without prior knowledge of their kinematic parameters, a landmark result for adaptive robotic systems. Hosoda has also made substantial contributions to social robotics, developing constructive models of joint attention and infant vowel acquisition that illuminate the origins of human communication. His engineering versatility is evident in work on anthropomorphic soft fingertips, pneumatic musculoskeletal robots, and miniature insect-inspired millirobots capable of multi-modal locomotion (270 citations). Across more than two decades, Hosoda has consistently bridged neuroscience, developmental psychology, and robotics, producing research that not only advances autonomous systems but deepens our understanding of biological intelligence itself.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

33
H-Index
188
Papers
5,301
Total Citations
28
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Cognitive Developmental Robotics: A Survey
546 citations · 2009
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2002 (18 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 192
🏛 Institutions: The University of Osaka, Kyoto University, University of British Columbia, Google (United States), Museum of Japanese Art Yamato Bunkakan, Osaka Gakuin University

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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