Professor Emeritus of Computer Science
Computer Science Department, Stanford University,
Stanford, California 94305-9035
winograd@cs.stanford.edu
I'm retired. No regular office hours. To arrange a time, please contact me by email.
Terry Winograd is Professor Emeritus in the Computer Science Department at Stanford University. During his 40 years of teaching and research he created and directed the Human-Computer Interaction Group and the teaching and research program in Human-Computer Interaction Design at Stanford. He was a founding faculty member of the Hasso Plattner Institute of Design (the "d.school").
Winograd did pioneering research in artificial intelligence, in particular natural language understanding, during his PhD program at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab in the 1960s. His 1986 book with Fernando Flores, Understanding Computers and Cognition, marked a major departure in the philosophy underlying AI. He was a founding member and National President of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility. He is a member of the ACM CHI Academy and an ACM Fellow. He received the 2011 CHI Lifetime Research Achievement Award. He is a Fellow of the Stanford Human-Centered AI Institute and is on the board of Corporate Accountability International. He has been a consultant to a number of companies, including Google, founded by Stanford students from his projects.
Books
Terry Winograd, Understanding Natural Language, Academic Press, 1972.
Terry Winograd, Language as a Cognitive Process: Syntax, Addison-Wesley, 1983.
Terry Winograd and Fernando Flores, Understanding Computers and Cognition: A New Foundation for Design Addison-Wesley, 1987
Paul Adler and Terry Winograd (eds.) Usability: Turning Technologies into Tools Oxford, 1992
Terry Winograd, with John Bennett, Laura De Young, and Bradley Hartfield (eds.), Bringing Design to Software, Addison Wesley, 1996.
Complete curriculum vitae