Papers
182
Total Citations
7,821
H-Index
41
About
Bruce A. MacDonald is a pioneering robotics researcher whose work sits at the intersection of human-robot interaction, healthcare technology, and autonomous systems. Based at the University of Auckland, MacDonald has made transformative contributions to our understanding of how robots can support aging populations, accumulating well over 3,500 citations across his most influential works alone. His most celebrated research explores the social and psychological dimensions of healthcare robots for older adults. His 2009 review on robot acceptance (870 citations) and his 2013 randomized controlled trial examining companion robot effects (554 citations) established foundational frameworks for evaluating how elderly users engage with robotic systems. His clinical work extended into dementia care, with rigorous trials demonstrating measurable psychosocial benefits for vulnerable populations. MacDonald has also examined critical design questions, revealing how humanlike facial displays shape perceptions of robot mind and personality — findings directly informing commercial robot design. Beyond eldercare, MacDonald contributed significantly to open-source robotics infrastructure through Player 2.0 and to agricultural automation via deep-learning-based kiwifruit harvesting robots. His interdisciplinary reach — spanning robotics engineering, clinical trials, cognitive science, and precision agriculture — marks him as an unusually versatile and globally impactful figure in applied robotics research.
Research Focus
Key Achievements
Top Papers
- 1
- 2The Psychosocial Effects of a Companion Robot: A Randomized Controlled Trial554 citations · 2013
- 3The Role of Healthcare Robots for Older People at Home: A Review448 citations · 2014
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- 7Attitudes towards health‐care robots in a retirement village226 citations · 2011
- 8Player 2.0: Toward a Practical Robot Programming Framework224 citations · 2008
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- 10Age and gender factors in user acceptance of healthcare robots200 citations · 2009