Across the Pond and into the Field: Visiting scholar joins MSU Ag Autonomy Institute to ârethink the possibleâ
Contact: Mary Kathryn Kight
STARKVILLE, Miss.âKit Franklin will be the first to point out the irony. He is driven by human connection, but heâs built his career on replacing human hands with machines.
âAutomation is just the means to the end. The end is always about helping farmers,â he said.
Franklin is a visiting agricultural engineer at ´ķĪķAPPâs Agricultural Autonomy Institute and one of the most recognized figures in the development of autonomous farming worldwide. As the lead at Harper Adams University in England on the Hands-Free Hectare project, the worldâs first fully autonomous cropping cycle, Franklin earned interviews with media, spoke before British politicians and royalty, and helped put agricultural autonomy on the global map.
When MSU AAI Director Alex Thomasson traveled to the U.K. in 2021, he made a point of meeting Franklin in person.
âI really wanted to have an international scholar come and spend time with us, and he was the key person I wanted,â Thomasson said.
Franklin attended the instituteâs grand opening at MSU in fall 2023 and was involved in some of AAIâs early work at the university. When he returned for a six-month residency in fall 2025, he found something far more substantial than the institute he had seen take its first steps.
During the two years between Franklinâs visits, the AAI grew to an institute that now operates the largest fleet of U.S.-manufactured spray drones of any academic institution, formed a research partnership with John Deere and secured funding from the Sugar Cane Growers Cooperative of Florida to develop a novel AI-based system.
AAI Associate Director Madison Dixon, who has watched the institute grow from its earliest days, said heâs proud of the progress.
âWe started from square one with a vision from Dr. Thomasson and some seed funding,â Dixon said. âThree years later, weâve done exactly what we intended to do, and weâve only begun to scratch the surface.â
Franklin has been directly involved in the sugar cane project, helping incorporate a new sensor that reshaped the prototypeâs direction. He also worked with MSU Research Associate Luke Gray to establish safety and organizational policies.
âSafety has been the hallmark of the effort,â Dixon said. âKit has helped us make the most of the space we have and put policies in place to support our work.â
For Hussein Gharakhani, an assistant professor of agricultural and biological engineering, Franklin has been a valuable collaborator on multiple projects.
âHe is one of those people that I can talk with easily, and we can transfer ideas in a second,â said Gharakhani, who has worked with Franklin on autonomous machinery safety research and a new course in advanced precision agriculture technology, benefiting from Franklinâs perspectives on European testing protocols and safety procedures.
Franklin and Thomasson traveled together to California and Washington to meet specialty crop growers in January, and what they saw underscored why the creation of autonomous machinery is so urgent. In Washington, orchard after orchard went unharvested the previous year because the cost of labor exceeded the revenue the crop could generate.
âThere are fewer and fewer people who want to do manual labor,â Thomasson said. âAutonomous systems are being driven by labor difficulties, and thatâs not going away.â
High-value specialty crops require nuanced, variable work that current systems arenât yet equipped to handle on a large scale. Closing that gap and making the technology practical enough to work in real farm conditions is the challenge.
âWe want to be an economic growth agent for the state of Mississippi. We want to build some of that business here. Ultimately, our goal is to solve a significant chunk of the worldâs problems around automation relative to food production, because the world needs us to do this,â Thomasson said.
Franklin has thrown himself into more than research while at MSU. He ate crawfish on the banks of the Mississippi River in Natchez. He cheered on the Bulldogs at football, basketball and baseball games. He drove through the Delta and met people along the way.
âItâs rewarding to feel appreciated by someone whoâs come all the way across the pond,â said Dixon, who grew up in the Delta. âHe shows a genuine interest in wanting to learn more about Mississippi and how he can help the institute, the university and the state.â
That, in the end, is what Franklin said drew him hereânot prestige, but purpose. Franklin has spent his career trying to solve challenges for farmers, and he found people at MSU who share the same passion.
âAsk anyone in agriculture what farming will look like in 20 years, and theyâll likely say, âshinier tractors, higher costs, less profit,ââ Franklin said. âWhat we need to say instead is: rethink the possible. Thatâs what theyâre doing at the Agricultural Autonomy Institute, and Iâm proud to play a small part in that.â
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