About

Brian Scassellati is a pioneering roboticist whose work sits at the intersection of social robotics, human-robot interaction, and assistive technology. A professor at Yale University, Scassellati has spent decades advancing our understanding of how robots can engage meaningfully with humans, with particular focus on humanoid systems and socially intelligent machines. His early contributions through the Cog Project helped lay the groundwork for humanoid robot development, while his foundational explorations of robot imitation and theory of mind established key cognitive frameworks still referenced today. Scassellati is perhaps best known for his transformative research applying social robots to autism therapy and education. His studies demonstrating that robots can elicit novel social behaviors in children with autism spectrum disorders—and that robotic tutors can achieve outcomes comparable to human instruction—have profoundly shaped both clinical practice and educational technology. With papers accumulating over 1,400 and 1,100 citations respectively, his influence spans education, healthcare, and core robotics science. His contributions to socially assistive robotics and reviews of social eye gaze in human-robot interaction have further cemented his reputation as a defining voice in the field. Scassellati's body of work collectively underscores the transformative potential of physically embodied robots in improving human lives.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

56
H-Index
203
Papers
16,131
Total Citations
79
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Social robots for education: A review
1,445 citations · 2018
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2016 (21 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 268
🏛 Institutions: Yale University, Intel (United States), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Robotics Research (United States)

Top Papers

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    Robots that imitate humans
    422 citations · 2002
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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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