Lisa Nocks
Papers
1
Total Citations
43
H-Index
1
About
Lisa Nocks is a scholar whose work sits at the intersection of technology, history, and culture, with a particular focus on robotics and its social implications. Her most recognized contribution is her 2007 work *The Robot*, which has accumulated 43 citations and stands as a thoughtful examination of how robots have been imagined, represented, and anticipated across human culture — from early science fiction archetypes like Robbie the Robot and C-3PO to more ominous figures such as the Terminator. Rather than approaching robotics purely from an engineering perspective, Nocks brings a humanistic lens to the subject, exploring how fictional and cultural depictions of robots reflect deeper societal anxieties, aspirations, and assumptions about technology's role in human life. Her work is particularly valuable for readers seeking to understand why robots occupy such a prominent place in visions of the future, and what those visions reveal about us as a society. For students and researchers working in science and technology studies, the history of technology, or human-robot interaction, Nocks offers an accessible yet intellectually rigorous entry point into one of modernity's most enduring technological fascinations.
Research Focus
Key Achievements
Top Papers
- 1The Robot43 citations · 2007