Trevor J. Smedley

Dalhousie University, Technical University of Nova Scotia

Papers

5

Total Citations

64

H-Index

5

About

Trevor J. Smedley is a researcher whose work sits at the intersection of visual programming languages and robotics, with a particular focus on making robot control more intuitive and accessible through visual representations. His most influential contribution, "Visual Programming for Robot Control" (2002, 22 citations), argues that visual languages hold a distinct advantage over traditional programming by directly representing algorithmic structure, making complex systems easier to build and understand — especially when the domain involves physically observable behavior like robotic movement. Smedley's body of work spans the late 1990s and early 2000s, during which he consistently explored how concrete visual representations could bridge the gap between human intent and machine behavior. His 1998 paper on concrete representation in visual languages for robot control (14 citations) laid important theoretical groundwork, while his practical investigations — including procedural, object-oriented, and domain-specific visual approaches to robot programming — demonstrated the real-world applicability of these ideas. His involvement in the Visual Programming Challenge series further highlights his commitment to comparative evaluation within the field. Collectively, his research has helped shape foundational thinking around end-user robot programming and the design of specialized visual languages for physical computing domains.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

5
H-Index
5
Papers
64
Total Citations
13
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Visual programming for robot control
22 citations · 2002
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2002 (3 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 9
🏛 Institutions: Dalhousie University, Technical University of Nova Scotia

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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