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On July 1, 2003, the Laboratory for Computer Science and the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory merged to form the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, or CSAIL. Rodney A. Brooks served as Director from 2003 to 2007 and Victor W. Zue served as Codirector until 2007, when he became sole Director.
Directors
of Project MAC and LCS
| Robert
M. Fano |
1963-1968 |
| J.
C. R. Licklider |
1968-1971 |
| Edward
Fredkin |
1971-1974 |
| Michael
Dertouzos |
1974-2001 |
| Victor W.
Zue |
2001-2003 |
The
Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Laboratory for Computer
Science (LCS), a laboratory for research in computer science and
engineering, was first established in 1963 as Project MAC in the
Department of Electrical Engineering.
The
name MAC was chosen because the acronym stood for several significant
phrases describing the project and its goals. "Machine-aided cognition"
was the broad objective, and the principal tool for attaining the
objective was to be a "multiple access computer." MAC was called
a project rather than a laboratory because its creators hoped that
it would attract MIT personnel with various interests in the use
of computers, who could participate in MAC without abandoning their
existing lab affiliations.
By
1967 Project MAC had separated from the Department of Electrical
Engineering and started reporting directly to the MIT provost as
an interdepartmental laboratory. It briefly had the name MAC Laboratory
before it was renamed Laboratory for Computer Science in 1976. In
1981, while retaining interdepartmental status, the director began
reporting to the dean of the School of Engineering.
The
principal research focus for early phases of MAC/LCS was the development
and improvement of a computer time-sharing system, work that was
funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).
Around 1976 the lab's focus broadened to embrace a diverse program
of research sponsored by various private industries and several
government agencies, resulting in a corresponding administrative
reorganization of the lab into several divisions, separate but interacting
research groups whose name, number, and exact research responsibilities
evolved over time.
Prepared
by the Institute Archives, MIT Libraries
December 1995; updated 2001, 2008
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