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Patric Jensfelt

Professor, Centre for Autonomous Systems

Photo: Jann Lipka

Patric Jensfelt was installed as professor November 15, 2013 at City Hall. Here you can see his presentation film and read about his research.

Contact Patric Jensfelt

About Patric Jensfelts research

Robotics started out mainly as automation, but now covers a wide range of applications. Today, robots are commonplace in production systems where they provide speed, precision and strength. They assist surgeons and explore places far away in space. Robotics technology also plays an in integral role in non-robotics applications; for example, to add assistive and safety features in cars and trucks.

To go beyond pre-programmed applications or the need for a human in-the-loop requires autonomy. This provides the ability to cope with the uncertainty that characterizes the real world and to deal with events for which the system was not programmed. The ability to move about in the environment, to know where the robot is and what the environment looks like have, are key enablers for autonomy of mobile robots. Dealing with more advanced tasks and interacting in a natural way with humans requires that robots also understand enough to make predictions about what will happen based on past experience and information from sensors.

Robotics has the potential to assist us humans and our society in many ways. Robots can lend us a helping hand when we need one, they can carry out tasks that are too dangerous or dull, and the robotics technology will enable new and exciting new products in the future.

Page responsible:ceremonier@kth.se
Belongs to: About KTH
Last changed: Dec 16, 2013
Lihui Wang
Liubov Belova
Martin Norgren
Magnus Jansson
Jacob Odeberg
Jens Fransson
Joakim Gustafson
Kjell Andersson
Anna-Karin Tornberg
Alexander Balatsky
Hans Bodén
Frank Niklaus
Mehrdad Ghandhari Alavijh
Patric Jensfelt
Lina Bertling Tjernberg
Mats Boijs