List of people associated with PARC

Many notable computer scientists and others have been associated with PARC (Palo Alto Research Center Incorporated, formerly Xerox PARC). They include:

  • Nina Amenta (at PARC 1996–1997),[1] researcher in computational geometry and computer graphics
  • Anne Balsamo (at PARC 1999–2002),[2] media studies scholar of connections between art, culture, gender, and technology
  • Patrick Baudisch (at PARC 2000–2001),[3] , in human–computer interaction
  • Daniel G. Bobrow (at PARC 1972– 2017),[4] artificial intelligence researcher
  • Susanne Bødker (at PARC 1982–1983),[5] researcher in human–computer interaction
  • David Boggs (at PARC 1972–1982),[6] computer network pioneer, coinventor of Ethernet
  • Anita Borg (at PARC 1997–2003),[7] computer systems researcher, advocate for women in computing
  • John Seely Brown (at PARC 1978–2000),[8] researcher in organizational studies, chief scientist of Xerox
  • Bill Buxton (at PARC 1989–1994),[9] pioneer in human–computer interaction
  • Stuart Card (at PARC 1974-2010),[10] applied human factors in human–computer interaction
  • Robert Carr (at PARC in late 1970s),[11] CAD and office software designer
  • Ed Chi (at PARC 1997–2011),[12] researcher in information visualization and the usability of web sites
  • Elizabeth F. Churchill (at PARC 2004–2006),[13] specialist in human-computer interaction and social computing
  • Lynn Conway (at PARC 1973–1982),[14] VLSI design pioneer and transgender activist
  • Franklin C. Crow (at PARC circa 1982–1990), computer graphics expert who did early research in antialiasing
  • Pavel Curtis (at PARC 1983–1996),[15] pioneer in text-based online virtual reality systems
  • Doug Cutting (at PARC 1990-1994), creator of Nutch, Lucene, and Hadoop
  • Steve Deering (at PARC circa 1990–1996), internet engineer, lead designer of IPv6
  • L Peter Deutsch (at PARC 1971–1986),[16] implementor of LISP 1.5, Smalltalk, and Ghostscript
  • David DiFrancesco (at PARC 1972–1974), worked with Richard Shoup on PAINT, co-founder of Pixar
  • Paul Dourish (at PARC mid-1990s),[17] researcher at the intersection of computer science and social science
  • Jerome I. Elkind (at PARC 1971–1978),[18] head of the Computer Science Laboratory at PARC
  • Clarence Ellis (at PARC 1976–1984),[19] first African-American CS PhD, pioneer of computer-supported cooperative work
  • David Em (at PARC 1975),[20] computer artist, first fine artist to create a computer model of a 3d character
  • Bill English (at PARC 1971–1989),[21] co-inventor of the computer mouse
  • David Eppstein (at PARC 1989–1990),[22] researcher in computational geometry and graph algorithms
  • John Ellenby (at PARC 1975–1978), Led AltoII development, 1979 founded GRID Systems
  • Matthew K. Franklin (at PARC 1998–2000),[23] developed pairing-based elliptic-curve cryptography
  • Gaetano Borriello (at PARC 1980–1987),[24] developer of the Open Data Kit
  • Sean R. Garner (at PARC circa 2009– ), researcher in photovoltaics and sustainable engineering
  • Charles Geschke (at PARC 1972–1980),[25] invented page description languages, co-founded Adobe
  • Adele Goldberg (at PARC 1973–1986),[26] designer of Smalltalk and president of ACM
  • Jack Goldman, chief scientist of Xerox 1968–1982 and (in 1970) founder of PARC[27]
  • Bill Gosper (at PARC 1977–1981),[28] founder of the hacker community, pioneer of symbolic computation
  • Rich Gossweiler (at PARC 1997–2000),[29] software engineer, expert in interaction design
  • Rebecca Grinter (at PARC 2000–2004),[30] researcher in human-computer interaction and computer-supported cooperative work
  • Neil Gunther (at PARC 1982–1990),[31] developer of open-source performance modeling software
  • Marti Hearst (at PARC 1994–1997),[32] expert in computational linguistics and search engine user interfaces
  • Jeffrey Heer (at PARC 2001-2005),[33] expert in information visualization and interactive data analysis
  • Bruce Horn (at PARC 1973–1981),[34] member of the original Apple Macintosh design team
  • Bernardo Huberman (at PARC circa 1982–2000), applied chaos theory to web dynamics
  • Dan Ingalls (at PARC circa 1972–1984), implemented Smalltalk virtual machine, invented bit blit
  • Van Jacobson (at PARC 2006– ),[35] developed internet congestion control protocols and diagnostics
  • Natalie Jeremijenko (at PARC 1995),[36] installation artist
  • Ronald Kaplan (at PARC 1974–2006),[37][38] expert in natural language processing, helped develop Interlisp
  • Jussi Karlgren (at PARC 1991-1992),[39] known for work on stylistics, evaluation of search technology, and statistical semantics
  • Lauri Karttunen (at PARC 1987–2011),[40] developed finite state morphology in computational linguistics
  • Alan Kay (at PARC 1971–1981),[41] pioneer of object-oriented programming and graphical user interfaces
  • Martin Kay (at PARC 1974– ),[37] expert on machine translation and computational linguistics
  • Gregor Kiczales (at PARC 1984–2002),[42] invented aspect-oriented programming
  • Ralph Kimball (at PARC 1972–1982),[43] designed first commercial workstation with mice, icons, and windows
  • Butler Lampson (at PARC 1971–1983),[44] won Turing Award for his development of networked personal computers
  • David M. Levy (at PARC 1984–1999),[45] researcher on information overload
  • Cristina Lopes (at PARC 1995–2002),[46] researcher in aspect-oriented programming and ubiquitous computing
  • Richard Francis Lyon (at PARC 1977–1981),[47] built the first optical mouse
  • Jock D. Mackinlay (at PARC 1986–2004)[48] researcher in information visualization
  • Cathy Marshall (at PARC circa 1989–2000), researcher on hypertext and personal archiving
  • Edward M. McCreight (at PARC 1971–1989)[49] co-invented B-trees
  • Scott A. McGregor (at PARC 1978–1983)[50] worked on Xerox Star, Viewers for Cedar and then Windows 1.0 at Microsoft
  • Sheila McIlraith (at PARC 1997–1998),[51] researcher in artificial intelligence and the semantic web
  • Ralph Merkle (at PARC 1988–1999),[52] invented public key cryptography and cryptographic hashing
  • Diana Merry (at PARC circa 1971–1986), helped develop Smalltalk, co-invented bit blit
  • Robert Metcalfe (at PARC 1972–1979),[53] co-invented Ethernet, formulated Metcalfe's Law
  • Jim Mitchell (at PARC 1971–1984),[54] developed WATFOR and ARM RISC chip
  • Louis Monier (at PARC 1983–1989),[55] founder of AltaVista search engine
  • Thomas P. Moran (at PARC 1974–2001),[56] founded journal Human-Computer Interaction
  • James H. Morris (at PARC 1974–1982),[57] co-invented KMP string matching algorithm and lazy evaluation
  • Elizabeth Mynatt (at PARC 1995–1998),[58] studied digital family portraits and ubiquitous computing
  • Martin Newell (at PARC 1979–1981),[59] graphics expert who created the Utah teapot
  • William Newman (at PARC 1973–1979),[60] Graphics and HCI researcher, developed drawing and page description software
  • Geoffrey Nunberg (at PARC 1987–2001),[61] linguist known for his work on lexical semantics
  • Severo Ornstein (at PARC 1976–1983),[62] founding head of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility
  • Valeria de Paiva (at PARC 2000–2008),[63] uses logic and category theory to model natural language
  • George Pake (at PARC 1970–1986),[64] pioneer in nuclear magnetic resonance, founding director of PARC
  • Jan O. Pedersen (at PARC circa 1990-1996), researcher in search system technology and algorithms
  • Peter Pirolli (at PARC 1991– ),[65] developed information foraging theory
  • Calvin Quate (at PARC 1983–1994),[66] invented the atomic force microscope
  • Ashwin Ram (at PARC circa 2011– ), researcher on artificial intelligence for health applications
  • Prasad Ram (at PARC circa 1998–2000), expert on digital rights management and web search
  • Trygve Reenskaug (at PARC 1978–1979),[67] formulated model-view-controller user interface design
  • George G. Robertson (at PARC circa 1988–1995), information visualization expert
  • Eric Schmidt (at PARC 1982–1983),[68] CEO of Google and chairman of Alphabet
  • Ronald V. Schmidt (at PARC 1980–1985),[69] computer network engineer who founded SynOptics
  • Michael Schroeder (at PARC circa 1977–1985), co-invented the Needham–Schroeder protocol for encrypted networking
  • Bertrand Serlet (at PARC 1985–1989),[70] led the Mac OS X team
  • Scott Shenker (at PARC 1984–1998),[71] leader in software-defined networking
  • John Shoch (at PARC 1971–1980),[72] developed an important predecessor of TCP/IP networking
  • Richard Shoup (at PARC 1971–1978), invented SUPERPAINT and the first 8 bit Frame Buffer (picture memory), 1979 co-founded Aurora
  • Charles Simonyi (at PARC 1972-1981),[73] led the creation of Microsoft Office
  • Alvy Ray Smith (at PARC 1974),[74] cofounded Pixar
  • Brian Cantwell Smith (at PARC 1982–1996),[75] invented introspective programming and researches computational metaphors
  • David Canfield Smith (at PARC 1975),[76] invented computer icons
  • Robert Spinrad (at PARC 1978–1982),[77] designed vacuum tube computers, directed PARC
  • Bob Sproull (at PARC 1973–1977),[78] designed early head-mounted display, wrote widely used computer graphics textbook
  • Jessica Staddon (at PARC 2001–2010),[79] information privacy researcher
  • Gary Starkweather (at PARC 1970–1988),[80] invented laser printers and color management
  • Maureen C. Stone (at PARC circa 1980–1998), expert in color modeling
  • Lucy Suchman (at PARC 1980–2000),[81] researcher on human factors, cybercultural anthropology, and feminist theory
  • Bert Sutherland (at PARC 1975–1981),[82] brought social scientists to PARC
  • Robert Taylor (at PARC 1970–1983),[83] managed early ARPAnet development, founded DEC Systems Research Center
  • Warren Teitelman (at PARC 1972–1984),[84] designed Interlisp
  • Shang-Hua Teng (at PARC 1991–1992),[85] invented smoothed analysis of algorithms and near-linear-time Laplacian solvers
  • Larry Tesler (at PARC 1973–1980),[86] developed Object Pascal and Apple Newton
  • Chuck Thacker (at PARC 1971–1983),[87] chief designer of Alto, co-invented Ethernet
  • David Thornburg (at PARC 1971-1981) [88] inventor of grapghcs touch tablet, co-founder of Koala Technologies
  • John Warnock (at PARC 1978–1982),[89] co-founded Adobe
  • Mark Weiser (at PARC 1987–1999),[90] invented ubiquitous computing
  • Niklaus Wirth (at PARC 1976–1977 and 1984–1985),[91] designed Pascal and other programming languages
  • Frances Yao (at PARC 1979–1999),[92] researcher in computational geometry and combinatorial algorithms
  • Annie Zaenen (at PARC 2001–2011),[93] researcher on linguistic encoding of temporal and spatial information
  • Lixia Zhang (at PARC 1989–1996),[94] computer networking pioneer

References

  1. Nina Amenta Receives CAREER Award, University of Texas at Austin, Computer Science Department, September 26, 2001, retrieved 2015-08-17.
  2. Peters-Lazaro, Gabriel (April 19, 2012), Designing Culture – Book Review, University of Southern California, Institute for Multimedia Literacy, retrieved 2015-08-17.
  3. BHATTACHARJEE, YUDHIJIT (March 14, 2002), "In a Seamless Image, The Great and Small", The New York Times.
  4. Hiltzik, Michael (September 28, 2010), "Silicon Valley tech innovator PARC celebrates 40th anniversary", Los Angeles Times.
  5. Kaptelinin, Victor; Nardi, Bonnie A. (2009), Acting with Technology: Activity Theory and Interaction Design, MIT Press, p. 74, ISBN 9780262263429
  6. Wende Vynorney Feller (2007), "Boggs, David R.", in Benjamin F. Shearer (ed.), Home front heroes: a biographical dictionary of Americans during wartime, 1, Greenwood Publishing Group, pp. 101–103, ISBN 978-0-313-33421-4
  7. Hafner, Katie (April 10, 2003), "Anita Borg, 54, Trailblazer For Women in Computer Field", The New York Times.
  8. "John Seely Brown Biography", Encyclopedia of World Biography, retrieved 2015-08-17.
  9. Curriculum vitae: William Buxton, July 23, 2015, retrieved 2015-08-17.
  10. "Stu Card", Designing Interactions: Interviews, MIT Press, 2002, retrieved 2015-08-17.
  11. "Innovators: Robert Carr", 25 Years of PC Magazine, Year Four: 1985, PC Magazine: 50, February 6, 2007.
  12. Resume: Ed H. Chi, retrieved 2015-08-17.
  13. Churchill, Elizabeth F., Research Interests & History, retrieved 2015-08-18.
  14. Gilder, George (1990), Microcosm: The Quantum Revolution In Economics And Technology, Simon and Schuster, p. 186, ISBN 9780671705923; Streeter, Thomas (2011), The Net Effect: Romanticism, Capitalism, and the Internet, NYU Press, p. 101, ISBN 9780814741160.
  15. Kiesler, Sara, ed. (2014), Culture of the Internet, Psychology Press, Contributor biographies, back matter, ISBN 9781317780373; Jones, Steve (2002), Encyclopedia of New Media: An Essential Reference to Communication and Technology, SAGE Publications, p. 280, ISBN 9781452265285.
  16. Madore, David (September 4, 2005), Great names in computer science, retrieved 2015-08-18.
  17. Crow, David; Parsowith, Sara; Wise, G. Bowden (April 1997), "Students: The Evolution of CSCW -- Past, Present and Future Developments", SIGCHI Bulletin, 29 (2), Before arriving at Apple in 1996, he spent seven years at the Rank Xerox Research Centre (formerly EuroPARC) in Cambridge, England, latterly dividing time between there, Xerox PARC and University College, London.
  18. Hiltzik, Michael A. (2009), Dealers of Lightning: Xerox PARC and the Dawn of the Computer Age, Harper Collins, p. 5, ISBN 9780061913501
  19. Moone, Tom (May 22, 2014), In Memory: Clarence "Skip" Ellis, 1943–2014, University of Illinois, Department of Computer Science, archived from the original on August 9, 2015, retrieved 2015-08-18.
  20. Em, David, War Stories, archived from the original on 2015-09-20, retrieved 2015-08-18.
  21. Bill English, Computer History Museum, retrieved 2015-08-18.
  22. Curriculum vitae: David Eppstein (PDF), retrieved 2015-08-18.
  23. Curriculum vitae: Matt Franklin (PDF), retrieved 2015-08-18.
  24. Ebling, Maria R. (23 April 2015). "In Memoriam: Gaetano Borriello, 1958–2015" (PDF). IEEE Pervasive Computing. 14 (2): 2–4. doi:10.1109/MPRV.2015.35. Retrieved 4 July 2017.
  25. "Charles Geschke", Markkula Center for Applied Ethics Advisory Board, Santa Clara University, retrieved 2015-08-18.
  26. Wayne, Tiffany K. (2011), American Women of Science Since 1900, ABC-CLIO, p. 438, ISBN 9781598841589.
  27. Kirk, Jeremy; Heichler, Elizabeth (December 22, 2011), "Xerox PARC founder Jacob E. Goldman dies", Computerworld.
  28. Gosper, R. William, Twubblesome Twelve: a difficult puzzle, retrieved 2015-08-18.
  29. Curriculum vitae: Rich Gossweiler, retrieved 2015-08-18.
  30. Curriculum vitae: Rebecca E. Grinter (PDF), retrieved 2015-08-18.
  31. Company Founder, Researcher, Author, Instructor: Neil J. Gunther, Performance Dynamics, May 30, 2012, retrieved 2015-08-18.
  32. Curriculum vitae: Marti A. Hearst (PDF), retrieved 2015-08-18.
  33. Vita: Jeffrey Heer, retrieved 2018-08-08.
  34. Sawyer, R. Keith (2012), Explaining Creativity: The Science of Human Innovation, Oxford University Press, p. 249, ISBN 9780199737574.
  35. "Official Biography: Van Jacobson", Internet Hall of Fame, The Internet Society, retrieved 2015-08-18.
  36. Simpson, Veronica (November 3, 2014), "Beyond Phones and Drones: Critical Design and Digital Technology", design/curial.
  37. Kay, Martin (2005), "A Life of Language" (PDF), Computational Linguistics, 31: 425–438, doi:10.1162/089120105775299159.
  38. Powerset and PARC Sign Exclusive Deal to Commercialize Breakthrough Search Engine Technology in Consumer Search, PARC, February 9, 2007.
  39. Jussi Karlgren at KTH, KTH, retrieved 2016-11-17
  40. Home page: Lauri Karttunen, Stanford University, retrieved 2015-08-20.
  41. Brand, Stewart (1989), The Media Lab: inventing the future at MIT, Penguin Books, p. 97, ISBN 9780140097016.
  42. Curriculum vitae: Gregor Kiczales (PDF), retrieved 2015-08-20.
  43. Kimball, Ralph; Caserta, Joe (2004), The Data WarehouseETL Toolkit: Practical Techniques for Extracting, Cleaning, Conforming, and Delivering Data, Wiley, p. xix, ISBN 9780764567575.
  44. Goldberg, Adele (1988), A History of Personal Workstations, ACM Press, p. 292, ISBN 9780201112597.
  45. Home page: David M. Levy, retrieved 2015-08-21.
  46. Lopes, Cristina Videira (December 2002), Aspect-Oriented Programming: An Historical Perspective (What’s in a Name?) (PDF), ISR Technical Report # UCI-ISR-02-5; Cristina Videira Lopes, Institute for Software Research, University of California, Irvine, retrieved 2015-08-21.
  47. "Dick Lyon". LinkedIn. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
  48. Jock Mackinlay, Tableau Software, retrieved 2015-08-23.
  49. Google+ user profile: Ed McCreight, retrieved 2015-08-23.
  50. Wallace, James; Erickson, Jim (June 1, 1993). Hard Drive: Bill Gates and the Making of the Microsoft Empire. Harper Business. ISBN 978-0887306297.
  51. McIlraith, Sheila, Brief bio, retrieved 2019-12-11
  52. Merkle Education and Work, retrieved 2015-08-23.
  53. Brandel, Mary (June 21, 1999), "Ethernet Emerges", Technology Flashback, Computerworld: 92.
  54. Speaker biography, IEE / Oracle Seminar, Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of California, Santa Barbara, retrieved 2015-08-23.
  55. Speaker biography: 2006 Web 2.0 Conference, retrieved 2015-08-23.
  56. Speaker biography: UCI ISR Distinguished Speaker Series, retrieved 2015-08-23.
  57. Curriculum vitae: James Morris, retrieved 2015-08-23.
  58. Elizabeth Mynatt, Professor and Director Institute for People and Technology, Biography, Georgia Institute of Technology, retrieved 2015-12-10.
  59. Author biography from Newell, M. E.; Fitzpatrick, D. T. (1982), "Exploitation of hierarchy in analyses of integrated circuit artwork", IEEE Transactions on Computer-Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems, 1 (4): 192–200, doi:10.1109/TCAD.1982.1270011
  60. "Origins & Early Development of PostScript and Scalable Digital Type Fonts at Xerox PARC and Adobe Systems (1975 – 1989) : HistoryofInformation.com". www.historyofinformation.com. Retrieved 2016-08-08.
  61. Speaker biography: Geoffrey Nunberg, PARC Forum, November 2, 2006, PARC, retrieved 2015-08-25.
  62. Oral history interview with Severo Ornstein, Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota, retrieved 2015-08-25.
  63. Valeria de Paiva, University of Birmingham, retrieved 2015-08-18, For many years (from 2000 to May 2008) I worked with PARC's natural language processing group.
  64. George Pake Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences
  65. Home page: Peter Pirolli, retrieved 2015-08-26.
  66. "2000 Joseph F. Keithley Award for Advances in Measurement Science Recipient". American Physical Society. Retrieved 4 July 2017.
  67. Reenskaug, Trygve, MVC, XEROX PARC 1978-79, retrieved 2015-08-26.
  68. Brezina, Corona (2012), Sergey Brin, Larry Page, Eric Schmidt, and Google, The Rosen Publishing Group, p. 100, ISBN 9781448869244.
  69. von Burg, Urs (2001), The Triumph of Ethernet: Technological Communities and the Battle for the LAN Standard, Innovations and technology in the world economy, Stanford University Press, pp. 177–178, ISBN 9780804740951.
  70. Schedule 14A, US Securities and Exchange Commission, retrieved 2015-08-28.
  71. Director biography: Scott Shenker, International Computer Science Institute, retrieved 2015-08-28.
  72. Trustee profile: John F. Schoch, Computer History Museum, archived from the original on 2015-09-05, retrieved 2015-08-28.
  73. Charles Simonyi, Computer History Museum, retrieved 2015-08-28.
  74. Smith, Alvy Ray, Biography, retrieved 2015-08-31.
  75. Age of significance: Brian Cantwell Smith, August 22, 2012, retrieved 2015-08-28.
  76. Müller-Prove, Matthias, "3.1.6 Xerox Star", Vision and Reality of Hypertext and Graphical User Interfaces, retrieved 2015-08-31.
  77. National Research Council, Policy and Global Affairs, Board on Science, Technology, and Economic Policy, Committee on Competing in the 21st Century: Best Practice in State and Regional Innovation Initiatives (2013), Wessner, Charles W. (ed.), Best Practices in State and Regional Innovation Initiatives: Competing in the 21st Century, National Academies Press, p. 225, ISBN 9780309287340CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link).
  78. Newsmaker: Sun Labs' new boss, cnet, June 8, 2006, retrieved 2015-08-28.
  79. CSC Department Welcomes New Faculty, North Carolina State University, July 6, 2015, retrieved 2019-09-28
  80. Speaker biography: Gary Starkweather, University of Washington Electrical Engineering Colloquium, October 16, 2003, archived from the original on November 6, 2015, retrieved 2015-08-28.
  81. Balsamo, Anne (2011), Designing Culture: The Technological Imagination at Work, Duke University Press, p. 56, ISBN 9780822344452.
  82. Hiltzik, Michael (February 19, 2004), "2 Brothers' High-Tech History in California", Los Angeles Times.
  83. Robert W. Taylor, 2013 Fellow, Computer History Museum, 2015-08-29, archived from the original on 2013-05-15, retrieved 2015-08-29.
  84. "Speaker biography: Warren Teitelman", Lisp50: the 50th birthday of Lisp at OOPSLA 2008, October 9, 2008, retrieved 2015-08-31.
  85. Curriculum vitae: Shang-Hua Teng (PDF), retrieved 2015-08-29.
  86. Metz, Cade (October 12, 2005), "Larry Tesler: Lead OS developer at Apple in the 1980s and 1990s", PC Magazine.
  87. Knies, Rob (March 9, 2010), Chuck Thacker Attains Computing’s Peak, Microsoft, retrieved 2015-08-29.
  88. "koalapad pcmuseum". pcmuseum.tripod.com. Retrieved 2020-06-17.
  89. "Simple ideas that changed printing and publishing" (PDF), The Herman H. Goldstine Lecture, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 156 (4): 363–378, 2012.
  90. Mark D. Weiser, July 23, 1952 – April 27, 1999, Xerox PARC, archived from the original on April 16, 2002, retrieved 2015-08-31CS1 maint: unfit url (link).
  91. "Niklaus E. Wirth", A.M. Turing Award, Association for Computing Machinery, retrieved 2015-08-31.
  92. Frances Foong Yao, Department of Computer Science, City University of Hong Kong, archived from the original on February 14, 2012, retrieved 2015-08-31CS1 maint: unfit url (link).
  93. "Zaenen Annie", Harvard Boas Scholars, retrieved 2015-08-31; Home page: Annie Zaenen, retrieved 2015-08-31.
  94. McCluskey, Eileen (October 20, 2009), "Lixia Zhang, PhD '89: Researcher played key role in developing Internet architecture", MIT Technology Review, retrieved 2015-08-31.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.