

Supporters Include


Owned and operated by



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Cynthia Breazeal
Associate Professor of Media Arts and Sciences
MIT Media Lab
Cynthia Breazeal, who directs the Media Lab's
Personal Robots group, came to the Lab in 2001 from MIT’s Artificial
Intelligence (AI) Lab. As a doctoral student and then postdoctoral
fellow at the AI Lab, Breazeal developed Kismet, an anthropomorphic
robotic head that has been widely featured in international media and is
the subject of her 2002 book Designing Sociable Robots. Breazeal’s
research explores expressive social exchange between humans and humanoid
robots. She is particularly interested in developing creature-like
technologies that exhibit social common-sense and engage people in
familiar, human terms. She continues to develop anthropomorphic robots
as part of her ongoing work of building artificial systems that learn
from and interact with people in an intelligent, life-like, and sociable
manner. Nexi, a mobile, dexterous social robot developed by Breazeal’s
research group, was named one of the 50 Best Innovations of 2008 by TIME
magazine. Breazeal earned ScD and MS degrees at MIT in electrical
engineering and computer science, and a BS in electrical and computer
engineering from the University of California, Santa Barbara.
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