|
Heads
of the Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems and its predecessors
| Gordon
S. Brown |
1939-1952 |
| William
M. Pease |
1952-1953 |
| J.
Francis Reintjes |
1953-1974 |
| Michael
Athans |
1974-1981 |
| Sanjoy
K. Mitter |
1981-1986 |
| Sanjoy
K. Mitter and Robert G. Gallager |
1986-Dec.
1998,
co-directors |
| Sanjoy
K. Mitter and Vincent
W. S. Chan |
Dec.
1998-July 1999,
co-directors |
| Vincent
W. S. Chan |
July
1999-2007 |
| Alan Willsky |
Acting director, 2007- |
The
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Servomechanisms Laboratory was established in the Department
of Electrical Engineering in 1939 by Assistant Professor Gordon
S. Brown in response to a request from the United States Navy for
a special course in servomechanisms and fire control (gun-positioning
instruments). During World War II the laboratory accepted research
and development for the U.S. government and commercial contractors.
In
1959 the Servomechanisms Laboratory was renamed the Electronic Systems
Laboratory (ESL) which reflected its goal to carry out basic and
applied research in the general area of complex engineering and
sociotechnical systems.
Though
the laboratory changed its name and widened its activities in many
areas, such as library automation, it retained a central identity
in automatic control and a pragmatic research program with a close
coupling to the teaching program. The ESL was a departmental laboratory
reporting to the head of the Department of Electrical Engineering
at the Institute until March 1978, when it became an interdisciplinary
laboratory reporting directly to the provost.
In
September 1978 the ESL was renamed the Laboratory for Information
and Decision Systems (LIDS), and in 1981 the lab began reporting
to the dean of the School of Engineering. Its fundamental research
goal is to advance the fields of systems, communication, and control.
Prepared
by the Institute Archives, MIT Libraries
November 1995; updated December 2002; August 2008
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