Margaret Boden

For Heinrich Himmler's wife, see Margarete Himmler.

Margaret A. Boden, OBE, (born 26 November 1936)[1] is Research Professor of cognitive science at the Department of informatics at the University of Sussex, where her work embraces the fields of artificial intelligence, psychology, philosophy, cognitive and computer science.

Early life and education

Boden was educated at the City of London School for Girls in the late 1940s and 1950s. At Newnham College, Cambridge, she took first class honours in medical sciences, achieving the highest score across all Natural Sciences. In 1957 she studied the history of modern philosophy at the Cambridge Language Research Unit run by Margaret Masterman.

Career

Boden lectured in philosophy at the University of Birmingham, until she became a Harkness Fellow at Harvard University, where she was awarded a Ph.D. in social psychology in 1968.[2]

She credits reading "Plans and the structure of behaviour" (Miller) with giving her the realisation that computer programme approaches could be applied to the whole of psychology.[3]

She was the founding Dean of the University of Sussex's School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences (COGS), precursor of the university's current Department of Informatics. As of October 2014 she is Research Professor of cognitive science at the Department of informatics, where her work encompasses the fields of artificial intelligence, psychology, philosophy, cognitive and computer science.

Media

In October 2014 and January 2015 Boden was interviewed by Jim Al-Khalili on BBC Radio Four programme The Life Scientific.[4]

Publications

Honours

See also

References

  1. DOB
  2. http://humbleapproach.templeton.org/Creativity/boden.html
  3. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b04lpzyr
  4. BBC Radio 4, October 2014, The Life Scientific - Margaret Boden
  5. Noam Chomsky Symposium on Margaret Boden, Mind as Machine: A History of Cognitive Science, Oxford (2006) two volumes. Reviewed in Artificial Intelligence Volume 171, Issue 18, (December 2007) Pages 1094-1103

External links