Papers
144
Total Citations
2,134
H-Index
23
About
Tsukasa Ogasawara is a pioneering robotics researcher whose work spans humanoid robotics, rehabilitation engineering, robotic manipulation, and human-robot interaction. Based at the Nara Institute of Science and Technology (NAIST), Ogasawara has made landmark contributions to some of the most challenging frontiers in modern robotics. His influential work on humanoid robots as passive-social and broadcasting communication media (137 and 49 citations respectively) introduced a novel paradigm: rather than demanding full interactivity from robots, they could serve as effective social conduits in public spaces. His development of the NAIST-Hand, a sophisticated multifingered robotic hand featuring vision-based tactile sensing and innovative palm-integrated motor design, has become a benchmark in dexterous manipulation research (94 citations). Complementing this, his systematic analysis of bin-picking technologies (78 citations) offers invaluable practical guidance for industrial robotics. Perhaps most impactful is Ogasawara's work in rehabilitation robotics. His research on exoskeleton-based individual muscle control (113 citations) and pinpointed muscle force assistance (68 citations) has opened meaningful avenues for stroke and spinal cord injury recovery. Together, these contributions reflect a career dedicated to bridging intelligent robotics with real-world human benefit.
Research Focus
Key Achievements
Top Papers
- 1Humanoid robots as a passive-social medium137 citations · 2007
- 2Individual Muscle Control Using an Exoskeleton Robot for Muscle Function Testing113 citations · 2010
- 3Development of the NAIST-Hand with Vision-based Tactile Fingertip Sensor94 citations · 2006
- 4
- 5Indoor Navigation for a Humanoid Robot Using a View Sequence78 citations · 2009
- 6
- 7The multifingered NAIST hand system for robot in-hand manipulation59 citations · 2009
- 8Slip-adaptive walk of quadruped robot52 citations · 2005
- 9Humanoid Robots as a Broadcasting Communication Medium in Open Public Spaces49 citations · 2009
- 10