About

Tetsuya Ogata is a pioneering researcher at the intersection of deep learning, robotics, and cognitive science, whose work has fundamentally advanced how robots perceive, learn, and interact with the world. His research spans humanoid robot control, multimodal sensory integration, robot audition, and the computational grounding of language in physical experience. Ogata's most influential contributions include developing deep neural network frameworks that enable robots to perform complex manipulation tasks — most notably a humanoid capable of repeatedly folding garments on production lines (235 citations) — and multimodal integration systems that fuse vision, sound, and touch to improve robotic perception (196 citations). His survey on symbol emergence in robotics (153 citations) has become a landmark reference for researchers exploring how machines can autonomously acquire language-like representations through embodied interaction. Beyond manipulation, Ogata has made significant strides in robot audition, including deep learning-based sound source localization (129 citations) and microphone array-based speech recognition (69 citations). His work on bidirectional translation between robot actions and linguistic descriptions reflects a sustained commitment to bridging motor behavior and language. With contributions spanning wearable robotics hardware to reinforcement learning for whole-body control, Ogata's career represents a remarkably broad and enduring influence on embodied artificial intelligence.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

31
H-Index
240
Papers
3,876
Total Citations
16
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
Repeatable Folding Task by Humanoid Robot Worker Using Deep Learning
235 citations · 2016
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2018 (16 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 214
🏛 Institutions: Waseda University, Ritsumeikan University, Kyoto University, Kyoto College of Graduate Studies for Informatics, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Suzuki (Japan)

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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