About

Stefan Thiemermann is a pioneer in human-robot collaboration, a field he helped shape from its earliest days. His research focuses on dismantling the traditional safety barriers between humans and machines, specifically within flexible assembly cells. His most influential work, "Direkte Mensch-Roboter-Kooperation in der Kleinteilemontage mit einem SCARA-Roboter" (2005, 51 citations), directly challenged the industry standard of separated workspaces. Thiemermann demonstrated that close, safe cooperation—enabling a seamless switch between manual and automatic tasks—was not only possible but essential for achieving the high product and volume flexibility demanded by modern production. His earlier foundational papers, including "Man‐robot cooperation in a flexible assembly cell" (2002), introduced the critical role of vision systems for ensuring human safety while maintaining productivity. By proving that a shared workspace could be both safe and efficient, Thiemermann laid the practical and conceptual groundwork for the collaborative robots (cobots) that are now central to Industry 4.0. His work remains a key reference for any researcher or engineer seeking to design truly cooperative, human-centric automation.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

3
H-Index
3
Papers
65
Total Citations
22
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Direkte Mensch-Roboter-Kooperation in der Kleinteilemontage mit einem SCARA-Roboter
51 citations · 2005
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2005 (1 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 3
🏛 Institutions: Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation, Stuttgart Observatory

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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