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Meet Our Team at #HRI2025 in Melbourne!

Meet Our Team at HRI2025 in Melbourne! Researchers from 4 of our 5 programs will be at the ACM/IEEE Human-Robot Interaction Conference next week!

Workshop Presentations
* Virtual, Augmented, and Mixed Reality for Human-Robot Interaction Workshop (VAM-HRI) (3 March)
* QUT (Queensland University of Technology) PhD researcher, Jasper Vermeulen & postdoctoral Research Fellow, Dr Alan Burden will lead the in-person session, featuring guest speaker Associate Professor Wafa Johal
* Workshop Organisers: Selen Turkay, Maciej Woźniak, Gregory LeMasurier, Glenda Caldwell, Jasper Vermeulen, Alan Burden
* PhD researcher Yuan Liu will present: “Augmented Reality for Human Decision Making & Human-Robot Collaboration: A Case Study in Manufacturing.”

* Cultural Robotics: Diversified Sustainable Practices (3 March)
Organised by: Belinda Dunstan, Jeffrey TKV Koh, Hooman Samani, Müge Belek Fialho Teixeira

Demonstrations
* QUT PhD researcher James Dwyer (4-5 March)
* “What Would Jim Henson Do? Roleplaying Human-Robot Collaborations Through Puppeteering”, co-developed with Stine Johansen & Markus Rittenbruch

Paper Presentations
* University of Technology Sydney Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Dr Fouad Sukkar & A/Prof Teresa Vidal-Calleja (5 March, Trust & Safety session)
“Enabling Safe, Active, and Interactive Human-Robot Collaboration via Smooth Distance Fields.” by Usama Ali, Fouad (Fred) Sukkar, Adrian Müller, Lan Wu, Cédric Le Gentil, Dr Tobias Kaupp, Teresa Vidal Calleja

* Dr Stine Johansen & Prof Markus Rittenbruch (4 March, 1B: Sound, Voices, Smells session)
“Embodied Composition for Imagining Robotic Sound Space”, authored by Stine Johansen, Yanto Browning, Anthony Brumpton, Jasper Vermeulen, Wei Win Loy, Jared Donovan, Markus Rittenbruch

* Jasper Vermeulen & Dr Alan Burden (5 March, Late Breaking Report)
“Investigating Human Factors in Mako-Assisted Total Knee Arthroplasty Surgeries”, by Jasper Vermeulen; Alan Burden; Glenda Caldwell; Müge Belek Fialho Teixeira; Matthias Guertler

* Visiting PhD researcher from The Australian National University Amir Asadi (4 March, Late Breaking Paper)
“Redrawing Boundaries: Systemic Impacts of Rehabilitation Robots in Clinical Care Settings”, by Amirhossein Asadi, Damith Herath, Grant Shaw, Glenda Caldwell, Elizabeth Williams

* Prof Markus Rittenbruch & Dong An (Late Breaking Paper)
“The Design of Extended Reality-enabled Tangible Interaction to Enhance the Interaction with Collaborative Robots” by Dong An; Markus Rittenbruch; Leo Razayan

Lab Visit – Friday 7th March
* Intelligent Robotics Lab at Swinburne University of Technology
See our Swinburne team’s robots in action! Contact Prof Mats Isaksson to book.

Our Quality Assurance & Compliance researchers from Swinburne, Michelle Dunn and Chris McCarthy, will also be attending the conference!

Full program HERE.

Meet our E.P.I.C. Researcher, Valeria Macalupú


Valeria Macalupú is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Human-Robot Interaction program (P2), sessional educator and interdisciplinary designer at Queensland University of Technology.

We interviewed Valeria recently to find out more about why she does what she does.

 

 

Tell us a bit about yourself and your research with the Centre? Include the long-term impact of what you are doing.

I am a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Human-Robot Interaction program (P2). I am also an industrial designer at heart, which was my bachelor’s degree in Peru. My research background is in co-designing social robots, particularly for aged care and service environments. Over the last 5 years, my research journey has focused on how design impacts robot acceptance, interaction, and integration in human spaces.

At the Centre, I contribute to shaping how cobots are designed for real-world use, ensuring they align with human needs, habits, workflows, and expectations. The long-term goal is to develop truly integrated robots into workplaces and society, making them more intuitive, accepted, and useful.

Why did you decide to be a part of the Australian Cobotics Centre?
I was drawn to the Centre because of its collaborative and interdisciplinary approach to robotics. My work sits at the intersection of design, robotics, and environment interaction, and the Centre provides a unique space to bridge these fields. The amazing work done at Program 2 allowed me to extend my knowledge across aged care and pedagogical areas to healthcare and manufacturing ones, which fills me with excitement.

Being part of a team that includes engineers, designers, and industry partners allows me to explore how we can design robots that truly work for people, not just technologically but socially and practically.

What project are you most proud of throughout your career and why?

One of my proudest projects is HELPII, where I contributed to researching and designing a social service robot for aged care. The fantastic team at the QUT Centre for Robotics (QCR) created this robot and developed the technology. We were invited to find a real market opportunity in aged care, and through multiple studies and visits to residential aged care facilities, we determined the best applications and tasks for the robot. I highlighted key design decisions that support understanding the real needs of staff and residents and ensuring the technology fits into their daily lives.

What made it meaningful was collaborating across disciplines and bringing the team together to see that robot design comes with many considerations, from colour and material theory to environmental systems and emotional design. Working with roboticists, architects, and aged care professionals to bridge gaps in communication and expectations was a brilliant experience. Particularly visiting and studying a facility with 10 robots in place! This project solidified my passion for HRI and showed me the real-world impact of thoughtful design.

What do you hope the long-term impact of your work will be?

I want to reshape how we design and implement robots in the home, workplaces and public spaces. Technological advancements often drive robotics, but thoughtful design plays a crucial role in ensuring robots are functional, intuitive, and widely accepted.

My goal is to establish better design, adoption, and co-habitation practices, ensuring robots are not just tools but seamlessly integrated into human environments. I hope my work lays the foundation for robots that feel as natural in our world as any other tool we use today.

Aside from your research, what topic could you give an hour-long presentation on with little to no preparation?

I could probably talk about design and decor in everyday life and how subtle decisions in design shape our interactions, experiences, and even behaviours. Design is everywhere, from how we intuitively use technology to how spaces influence our emotions. Otherwise, I could go on and on about Harry Potter and Lord of the Rings.

Exciting new collaborations are underway!

Quality Assurance and Compliance researchers, Dr. Mariadas Capsran Roshan (Swinburne University of Technology) and PhD researcher Munia Ahamed, visited Cook Medical in Brisbane to discuss upcoming projects as part of Munia’s PhD research.

They were joined by Dr. Valeria Macalupú (Human-Robot Interaction Postdoctoral Research Fellow at QUT), Gareth Keen (Cook Medical’s Manufacturing Engineering Manager), Kettina Materna (Cook Medical Continuous Improvement Lead), and Dr. Yuan Wang, contributing to an insightful and productive discussion.

A special thanks to Cook Medical for hosting—exciting developments lie ahead!

Learn more about the Quality Assurance and Compliance program and Munia’s project HERE.

2025 AIRAANZ Conference

In early February, our Human-Robot Workforce Program Co-Lead, Associate Professor Penny Williams and Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Dr Melinda Laundon were at the 2025 AIRAANZ conference co-hosted by Pasifika at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington and Massey University.

They presented their conference paper s on a range of work and technology research including labour shortages in manufacturing.

 

New Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Dr Valeria Macalupú

We are pleased to welcome Dr Valeria Macalupú as our newest Postdoctoral Research Fellow!

Valeria joins the QUT (Queensland University of Technology) team where she will be working within our Human Robot Interaction program under the supervision of Program co-Lead Associate Professor Jared Donovan!

Valeria will be researching the role of collaborative robots in enhancing manufacturing processes and enabling non-invasive manipulation in surgical settings. Her work aims to bridge the gap between innovative robotic technologies and their practical adoption in industry, with a focus on designing intuitive, user-centered systems.

With a PhD in Interaction Design from QUT and a strong foundation in Industrial Design, Valeria has led multidisciplinary research projects that co-design social and service robots through participatory design, co-design methods, and ethnographic studies. She has collaborated closely with partners in the aged care and robotics industries to create impactful solutions. Valeria’s research interests lie in human-robot collaboration, technology acceptance, and exploring the social dynamics of robotics in real-world environments.

Welcome to the team, Valeria!