CIRCA:MIT Media Lab

From CIRCA

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(and)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[image: MITML_SW.png|thumb|200px|right| The MIT Media Lab]]
[[image: MITML_SW.png|thumb|200px|right| The MIT Media Lab]]
-
The MIT Media Lab was founded in 1985 as an interdisciplinary approach between the Arts and Sciences to study the potential uses and effects of emerging technologies. A part of MIT's School of Architecture and Planning, the lab currently features over 350 projects and employs designers, engineers, artists, and research scientists. Currently, there are 28 permanent faculty and investigators working at the lab along with 141 graduate students. The lab is sponsored by over 70 entities and has an annual operating budget of $35 million.
+
The MIT Media Lab is a research laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology located in Cambridge Massachusetts. A part of the University's School of Architecture and Planning, the MIT Media Lab is an interdisciplinary research group dedicated to investigating the potential uses and effects of technology, multimedia, and design. Currently, there are over 170 researchers at the Media Lab, including 28 permanent faculty and principle investigators, working on over 350 projects. Over 70 sponsors fund the Lab's annual $35 million budget.
-
==History==
+
Opened in 1985 as the brain child of professor Nicholas Negroponte and former MIT president Jerome Wiesner, the lab occupied the specially designed Wiesner building on the University's main campus. Initially, the Media Lab had a 10 year mission exploring the uses and implications of the technologies of the emerging "digital revolution". Projects sponsored under this mandate include research into holography, electronic music, and cognition and learning. After its first decade, the lab shifted its focus to investigating digital technologies outside of the traditional "box" computer. Areas of research during this time included novel approaches to children's education, wireless communication, and new forms of artistic expression.
-
Born out of the work of the Architecture Machine Group, the MIT Media Lab opened its doors in 1985 in the specially designed Wiesner Building as the brain child of Professor Nicholas Negroponte and former MIT president Jerome Wiesner. The mandate of the Lab in its first decade was to progress the technology of the digital revolution, focusing its research on areas ranging from holography to cognition and learning.
+
After it's 20th anniversary the MIT Media Lab has begun to its work on "human adaptability", with areas of research ranging from Alzheimer's treatments to new methods for Human Computer Interaction. In 2009, the Media Lab opened a new six story facility that with the Wiesner Building forms the MIT Media Lab Complex.

Revision as of 17:16, 25 October 2011

The MIT Media Lab

The MIT Media Lab is a research laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology located in Cambridge Massachusetts. A part of the University's School of Architecture and Planning, the MIT Media Lab is an interdisciplinary research group dedicated to investigating the potential uses and effects of technology, multimedia, and design. Currently, there are over 170 researchers at the Media Lab, including 28 permanent faculty and principle investigators, working on over 350 projects. Over 70 sponsors fund the Lab's annual $35 million budget.

Opened in 1985 as the brain child of professor Nicholas Negroponte and former MIT president Jerome Wiesner, the lab occupied the specially designed Wiesner building on the University's main campus. Initially, the Media Lab had a 10 year mission exploring the uses and implications of the technologies of the emerging "digital revolution". Projects sponsored under this mandate include research into holography, electronic music, and cognition and learning. After its first decade, the lab shifted its focus to investigating digital technologies outside of the traditional "box" computer. Areas of research during this time included novel approaches to children's education, wireless communication, and new forms of artistic expression.

After it's 20th anniversary the MIT Media Lab has begun to its work on "human adaptability", with areas of research ranging from Alzheimer's treatments to new methods for Human Computer Interaction. In 2009, the Media Lab opened a new six story facility that with the Wiesner Building forms the MIT Media Lab Complex.

Personal tools