About

Marc Hanheide is a prominent robotics researcher whose work spans long-term autonomous systems, human-robot interaction (HRI), and responsible AI in real-world environments. Best known for his leadership in the STRANDS Project (196 citations), he has made foundational contributions to enabling service robots to operate reliably in complex, everyday settings over extended periods — a notoriously difficult challenge in autonomous systems. His research on task planning in open and uncertain worlds (152 citations) further demonstrates his commitment to building robots that can reason and adapt under real-world conditions. Hanheide has also made significant strides in agricultural robotics, championing responsible autonomous development in that sector (128 citations), and has advanced pedestrian trajectory prediction using long-term deployment data (104 citations). His work on trust in HRI, including a widely adopted taxonomy of failure types and mitigation strategies (93 citations), reflects a deep concern for safe, human-centered robot design. Earlier contributions in anthropomorphic robot interaction and multimodal social learning reveal a career consistently bridging technical rigor with human relevance. Through long-term real-world deployments — including the Lindsey museum tour guide robot — Hanheide has demonstrated an exceptional ability to translate laboratory research into genuine societal impact.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

30
H-Index
130
Papers
2,738
Total Citations
21
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
The STRANDS Project: Long-Term Autonomy in Everyday Environments
196 citations · 2017
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2018 (11 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 384
🏛 Institutions: University of Leeds, University of Lincoln, Hochschule Bielefeld, Bielefeld University, University of Birmingham, Birmingham City University

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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