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Computer (occupation)

The term "computer", in use from the early 17th century (the first known written reference dates from 1613),[1] meant "one who computes": a person performing mathematical calculations, before electronic computers became commercially available. Alan Turing described the "human computer" as someone who is "supposed to be following fixed rules; he has no authority to deviate from them in any detail."[2] Teams of people, often women from the late nineteenth century onwards, were used to undertake long and often tedious calculations; the work was divided so that this could be done in parallel. The same calculations were frequently performed independently by separate teams to check the correctness of the results.

NACA High Speed Flight Station "Computer Room" (1949)

Since the end of the 20th century, the term "human computer" has also been applied to individuals with prodigious powers of mental arithmetic, also known as mental calculators.

Origins in sciences edit

Astronomers in Renaissance times used that term about as often as they called themselves "mathematicians" for their principal work of calculating the positions of planets. They often hired a "computer" to assist them. For some men, such as Johannes Kepler, assisting a scientist in computation was a temporary position until they moved on to greater advancements. Before he died in 1617, John Napier suggested ways by which "the learned, who perchance may have plenty of pupils and computers" might construct an improved logarithm table.[3]: p.46 

Computing became more organized when the Frenchman Alexis Claude Clairaut (1713–1765) divided the computation to determine the time of the return of Halley's Comet with two colleagues, Joseph Lalande and Nicole-Reine Lepaute.[4] Human computers continued plotting the future movements of astronomical objects to create celestial tables for almanacs in the late 1760s.[5]

The computers working on the Nautical Almanac for the British Admiralty included William Wales, Israel Lyons and Richard Dunthorne.[6] The project was overseen by Nevil Maskelyne.[7] Maskelyne would borrow tables from other sources as often as he could in order to reduce the number of calculations his team of computers had to make.[8] Women were generally excluded, with some exceptions such as Mary Edwards who worked from the 1780s to 1815 as one of thirty-five computers for the British Nautical Almanac used for navigation at sea. The United States also worked on their own version of a nautical almanac in the 1840s, with Maria Mitchell being one of the best-known computers on the staff.[9]

Other innovations in human computing included the work done by a group of boys who worked in the Octagon Room of the Royal Greenwich Observatory for Astronomer Royal George Airy.[10] Airy's computers, hired after 1835, could be as young as fifteen, and they were working on a backlog of astronomical data.[11] The way that Airy organized the Octagon Room with a manager, pre-printed computing forms, and standardized methods of calculating and checking results (similar to the way the Nautical Almanac computers operated) would remain a standard for computing operations for the next 80 years.[12]

Women were increasingly involved in computing after 1865.[13] Private companies hired them for computing and to manage office staffs.[13]

In the 1870s, the United States Signal Corps created a new way of organizing human computing to track weather patterns.[14] This built on previous work from the US Navy and the Smithsonian meteorological project.[15] The Signal Corps used a small computing staff that processed data that had to be collected quickly and finished in "intensive two-hour shifts".[16] Each individual human computer was responsible for only part of the data.[14]

In the late nineteenth century Edward Charles Pickering organized the "Harvard Computers".[17] The first woman to approach them, Anna Winlock, asked Harvard Observatory for a computing job in 1875.[18] By 1880, all of the computers working at the Harvard Observatory were women.[18] The standard computer pay started at twenty-five cents an hour.[19] There would be such a huge demand to work there, that some women offered to work for the Harvard Computers for free.[20] Many of the women astronomers from this era were computers with possibly the best-known being Florence Cushman, Henrietta Swan Leavitt, and Annie Jump Cannon, who worked with Pickering from 1888, 1893, and 1896 respectively. Cannon could classify stars at a rate of three per minute.[21] Mina Fleming, one of the Harvard Computers, published The Draper Catalogue of Stellar Spectra in 1890.[22] The catalogue organized stars by spectral lines.[22] The catalogue continued to be expanded by the Harvard Computers and added new stars in successive volumes.[23] Elizabeth Williams was involved in calculations in the search for a new planet, Pluto, at the Lowell Observatory.

In 1893, Francis Galton created the Committee for Conducting Statistical Inquiries into the Measurable Characteristics of Plants and Animals which reported to the Royal Society.[24] The committee used advanced techniques for scientific research and supported the work of several scientists.[24] W.F. Raphael Weldon, the first scientist supported by the committee worked with his wife, Florence Tebb Weldon, who was his computer.[24] Weldon used logarithms and mathematical tables created by August Leopold Crelle and had no calculating machine.[25] Karl Pearson, who had a lab at the University of London, felt that the work Weldon did was "hampered by the committee".[26] However, Pearson did create a mathematical formula that the committee was able to use for data correlation.[27] Pearson brought his correlation formula to his own Biometrics Laboratory.[27] Pearson had volunteer and salaried computers who were both men and women.[28] Alice Lee was one of his salaried computers who worked with histograms and the chi-squared statistics.[29] Pearson also worked with Beatrice and Frances Cave-Brown-Cave.[29] Pearson's lab, by 1906, had mastered the art of mathematical table making.[29]

Mathematical tables edit

Human computers were used to compile 18th and 19th century Western European mathematical tables, for example those for trigonometry and logarithms. Although these tables were most often known by the names of the principal mathematician involved in the project, such tables were often in fact the work of an army of unknown and unsung computers. Ever more accurate tables to a high degree of precision were needed for navigation and engineering. Approaches differed, but one was to break up the project into a form of piece work completed at home. The computers, often educated middle class women whom society deemed it unseemly to engage in the professions or go out to work, would receive and send back packets of calculations by post.[30] The Royal Astronomical Society eventually gave space to a new committee, the Mathematical Tables Committee, which was the only professional organization for human computers in 1925.[31]

Fluid dynamics edit

Human computers were used to predict the effects of building the Afsluitdijk between 1927 and 1932 in the Zuiderzee in the Netherlands. The computer simulation was set up by Hendrik Lorentz.[32]

A visionary application to meteorology can be found in the scientific work of Lewis Fry Richardson who, in 1922, estimated that 64,000 humans could forecast the weather for the whole globe by solving the attending differential primitive equations numerically.[33] Around 1910 he had already used human computers to calculate the stresses inside a masonry dam.[34]

 
NACA human computers – Supersonic Pressure Tunnel staff in 1950s
 
1954, NACA computer working with microscope and calculator

Wartime computing and electronics edit

It was not until World War I that computing became a profession. "The First World War required large numbers of human computers. Computers on both sides of the war produced map grids, surveying aids, navigation tables and artillery tables. With the men at war, most of these new computers were women and many were college educated."[35] This would happen again during World War II, as more men joined the fight, college educated women were left to fill their positions. One of the first female computers, Elizabeth Webb Wilson, was hired by the Army in 1918 and was a graduate of George Washington University. Wilson "patiently sought a war job that would make use of her mathematical skill. In later years, she would claim that the war spared her from the 'Washington social whirl', the rounds of society events that should have procured for her a husband"[35] and instead she was able to have a career. After the war, Wilson continued with a career in mathematics and became an actuary and turned her focus to life tables.

Human computers played integral roles in the World War II war effort in the United States, and because of the depletion of the male labor force due to the draft, many computers during World War II were women, frequently with degrees in mathematics. In the 1940s, women were hired to examine nuclear and particle tracks left on photographic emulsions.[36] In the Manhattan Project, human computers working with a variety of mechanical aids assisted numerical studies of the complex formulas related to nuclear fission.[37]

Human computers were involved in calculating ballistics tables during World War I.[38] Between the two world wars, computers were used in the Department of Agriculture in the United States and also at Iowa State College.[39] The human computers in these places also used calculating machines and early electrical computers to aid in their work.[40] In the 1930s, The Columbia University Statistical Bureau was created by Benjamin Wood.[41] Organized computing was also established at Indiana University, the Cowles Commission and the National Research Council.[42]

Following World War II, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) used human computers in flight research to transcribe raw data from celluloid film and oscillograph paper and then, using slide rules and electric calculators, reduced the data to standard engineering units. Margot Lee Shetterly's biographical book, Hidden Figures (made into a movie of the same name in 2016), depicts African-American women who served as human computers at NASA in support of the Friendship 7, the first American crewed mission into Earth orbit.[43] NACA had begun hiring black women as computers from 1940.[44] One such computer was Dorothy Vaughan who began her work in 1943 with the Langley Research Center as a special hire to aid the war effort,[45] and who came to supervise the West Area Computers, a group of African-American women who worked as computers at Langley. Human computing was, at the time, considered menial work. On November 8, 2019, the Congressional Gold Medal was awarded "In recognition of all the women who served as computers, mathematicians, and engineers at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) between the 1930s and the 1970s."[46]

 
Computers for the Explorer 1 trajectory.

As electrical computers became more available, human computers, especially women, were drafted as some of the first computer programmers.[47] Because the six people responsible for setting up problems on the ENIAC (the first general-purpose electronic digital computer built at the University of Pennsylvania during World War II) were drafted from a corps of human computers, the world's first professional computer programmers were women, namely: Kay McNulty, Betty Snyder, Marlyn Wescoff, Ruth Lichterman, Betty Jean Jennings, and Fran Bilas.[48]

Human-assisted computation edit

The term "human computer" has been recently used by a group of researchers who refer to their work as "human computation".[49] In this usage, "human computer" refers to activities of humans in the context of human-based computation (HBC).

This use of "human computer" is debatable for the following reason: HBC is a computational technique where a machine outsources certain parts of a task to humans to perform, which are not necessarily algorithmic. In fact, in the context of HBC most of the time humans are not provided with a sequence of exact steps to be executed to yield the desired result; HBC is agnostic about how humans solve the problem. This is why "outsourcing" is the term used in the definition above. The use of humans in the historical role of "human computers" for HBC is very rare.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "computer". Oxford English Dictionary (Third ed.). Oxford University Press. March 2008. 1613 'R. B.' Yong Mans Gleanings 1, I have read the truest computer of Times, and the best Arithmetician that ever breathed, and he reduceth thy dayes into a short number.
  2. ^ Turing 1950.
  3. ^ Napier, John (1889) [1619]. The Construction of the Wonderful Canon of Logarithms (PDF). Translated by Macdonald, William Rae. Edinburgh: Blackwood & Sons. Also available on Wikisource
  4. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 22–25.
  5. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 29–30.
  6. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 30.
  7. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 29.
  8. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 31.
  9. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 61.
  10. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 50.
  11. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 50–51.
  12. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 54.
  13. ^ a b Grier 2005, pp. 81.
  14. ^ a b Grier 2005, pp. 77.
  15. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 76.
  16. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 76–77.
  17. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 82–83.
  18. ^ a b Grier 2005, pp. 82.
  19. ^ Sobel 2016, p. 31.
  20. ^ Sobel 2016, p. 105.
  21. ^ Evans 2018, p. 23.
  22. ^ a b Sobel 2016, p. 37.
  23. ^ Sobel 2016, p. 181.
  24. ^ a b c Grier 2005, pp. 106.
  25. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 106–107.
  26. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 107–108.
  27. ^ a b Grier 2005, pp. 108.
  28. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 110.
  29. ^ a b c Grier 2005, pp. 111.
  30. ^ Campbell-Kelly & Croarken 2003, p. 10.
  31. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 173.
  32. ^ Beenakker, C. "Lorentz and the Zuiderzee Project". Instituut-Lorenz for Theoretical Physics, University of Leiden. Retrieved November 19, 2015.
  33. ^ Hunt 1998, pp. xiii–xxxvi.
  34. ^ Roache 1998.
  35. ^ a b Grier, David Alan (March 1, 2001). "Human Computers: The First Pioneers of the Information Age". Endeavour. 25 (1): 28–32. doi:10.1016/S0160-9327(00)01338-7. PMID 11314458.
  36. ^ Light 1999, p. 459.
  37. ^ Kean 2010, p. 10.
  38. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 151–152.
  39. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 164.
  40. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 166.
  41. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 190.
  42. ^ Grier 2005, pp. 195.
  43. ^ Howell, Elizabeth (January 24, 2017). "The Story of NASA's Real 'Hidden Figures'". Scientific American. Retrieved January 26, 2017.
  44. ^ Evans 2018, pp. 24.
  45. ^ "DOROTHY VAUGHAN (nee JOHNSON)" (PDF). NASA. February 3, 2016.
  46. ^ "H.R.1396 - Hidden Figures Congressional Gold Medal Act". Congress.gov. November 8, 2019. Retrieved November 9, 2019.
  47. ^ Light 1999, p. 462.
  48. ^ ENIAC Programmers Project – Awards Archived April 14, 2013, at archive.today
  49. ^ Law & von Ahn 2011.

References edit

External links edit

  • Early NACA human computers at work, photograph, October 1949.
  • The Age of Female Computers June 16, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, by David Skinner
  • Sonoma State University April 22, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
  • Wellesley
  • Description of model of H. A. Lorentz

computer, occupation, indian, writer, mental, calculator, known, human, computer, shakuntala, devi, other, mental, calculators, mental, calculator, usage, human, thought, part, computing, human, based, computation, term, computer, from, early, 17th, century, f. For the Indian writer and mental calculator known as the human computer see Shakuntala Devi For other mental calculators see Mental calculator For the usage of human thought as part of computing see human based computation The term computer in use from the early 17th century the first known written reference dates from 1613 1 meant one who computes a person performing mathematical calculations before electronic computers became commercially available Alan Turing described the human computer as someone who is supposed to be following fixed rules he has no authority to deviate from them in any detail 2 Teams of people often women from the late nineteenth century onwards were used to undertake long and often tedious calculations the work was divided so that this could be done in parallel The same calculations were frequently performed independently by separate teams to check the correctness of the results NACA High Speed Flight Station Computer Room 1949 Since the end of the 20th century the term human computer has also been applied to individuals with prodigious powers of mental arithmetic also known as mental calculators Contents 1 Origins in sciences 2 Mathematical tables 3 Fluid dynamics 4 Wartime computing and electronics 5 Human assisted computation 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksOrigins in sciences editAstronomers in Renaissance times used that term about as often as they called themselves mathematicians for their principal work of calculating the positions of planets They often hired a computer to assist them For some men such as Johannes Kepler assisting a scientist in computation was a temporary position until they moved on to greater advancements Before he died in 1617 John Napier suggested ways by which the learned who perchance may have plenty of pupils and computers might construct an improved logarithm table 3 p 46 Computing became more organized when the Frenchman Alexis Claude Clairaut 1713 1765 divided the computation to determine the time of the return of Halley s Comet with two colleagues Joseph Lalande and Nicole Reine Lepaute 4 Human computers continued plotting the future movements of astronomical objects to create celestial tables for almanacs in the late 1760s 5 The computers working on the Nautical Almanac for the British Admiralty included William Wales Israel Lyons and Richard Dunthorne 6 The project was overseen by Nevil Maskelyne 7 Maskelyne would borrow tables from other sources as often as he could in order to reduce the number of calculations his team of computers had to make 8 Women were generally excluded with some exceptions such as Mary Edwards who worked from the 1780s to 1815 as one of thirty five computers for the British Nautical Almanac used for navigation at sea The United States also worked on their own version of a nautical almanac in the 1840s with Maria Mitchell being one of the best known computers on the staff 9 Other innovations in human computing included the work done by a group of boys who worked in the Octagon Room of the Royal Greenwich Observatory for Astronomer Royal George Airy 10 Airy s computers hired after 1835 could be as young as fifteen and they were working on a backlog of astronomical data 11 The way that Airy organized the Octagon Room with a manager pre printed computing forms and standardized methods of calculating and checking results similar to the way the Nautical Almanac computers operated would remain a standard for computing operations for the next 80 years 12 Women were increasingly involved in computing after 1865 13 Private companies hired them for computing and to manage office staffs 13 In the 1870s the United States Signal Corps created a new way of organizing human computing to track weather patterns 14 This built on previous work from the US Navy and the Smithsonian meteorological project 15 The Signal Corps used a small computing staff that processed data that had to be collected quickly and finished in intensive two hour shifts 16 Each individual human computer was responsible for only part of the data 14 In the late nineteenth century Edward Charles Pickering organized the Harvard Computers 17 The first woman to approach them Anna Winlock asked Harvard Observatory for a computing job in 1875 18 By 1880 all of the computers working at the Harvard Observatory were women 18 The standard computer pay started at twenty five cents an hour 19 There would be such a huge demand to work there that some women offered to work for the Harvard Computers for free 20 Many of the women astronomers from this era were computers with possibly the best known being Florence Cushman Henrietta Swan Leavitt and Annie Jump Cannon who worked with Pickering from 1888 1893 and 1896 respectively Cannon could classify stars at a rate of three per minute 21 Mina Fleming one of the Harvard Computers published The Draper Catalogue of Stellar Spectra in 1890 22 The catalogue organized stars by spectral lines 22 The catalogue continued to be expanded by the Harvard Computers and added new stars in successive volumes 23 Elizabeth Williams was involved in calculations in the search for a new planet Pluto at the Lowell Observatory In 1893 Francis Galton created the Committee for Conducting Statistical Inquiries into the Measurable Characteristics of Plants and Animals which reported to the Royal Society 24 The committee used advanced techniques for scientific research and supported the work of several scientists 24 W F Raphael Weldon the first scientist supported by the committee worked with his wife Florence Tebb Weldon who was his computer 24 Weldon used logarithms and mathematical tables created by August Leopold Crelle and had no calculating machine 25 Karl Pearson who had a lab at the University of London felt that the work Weldon did was hampered by the committee 26 However Pearson did create a mathematical formula that the committee was able to use for data correlation 27 Pearson brought his correlation formula to his own Biometrics Laboratory 27 Pearson had volunteer and salaried computers who were both men and women 28 Alice Lee was one of his salaried computers who worked with histograms and the chi squared statistics 29 Pearson also worked with Beatrice and Frances Cave Brown Cave 29 Pearson s lab by 1906 had mastered the art of mathematical table making 29 Mathematical tables editHuman computers were used to compile 18th and 19th century Western European mathematical tables for example those for trigonometry and logarithms Although these tables were most often known by the names of the principal mathematician involved in the project such tables were often in fact the work of an army of unknown and unsung computers Ever more accurate tables to a high degree of precision were needed for navigation and engineering Approaches differed but one was to break up the project into a form of piece work completed at home The computers often educated middle class women whom society deemed it unseemly to engage in the professions or go out to work would receive and send back packets of calculations by post 30 The Royal Astronomical Society eventually gave space to a new committee the Mathematical Tables Committee which was the only professional organization for human computers in 1925 31 Fluid dynamics editHuman computers were used to predict the effects of building the Afsluitdijk between 1927 and 1932 in the Zuiderzee in the Netherlands The computer simulation was set up by Hendrik Lorentz 32 A visionary application to meteorology can be found in the scientific work of Lewis Fry Richardson who in 1922 estimated that 64 000 humans could forecast the weather for the whole globe by solving the attending differential primitive equations numerically 33 Around 1910 he had already used human computers to calculate the stresses inside a masonry dam 34 nbsp NACA human computers Supersonic Pressure Tunnel staff in 1950s nbsp 1954 NACA computer working with microscope and calculatorWartime computing and electronics editIt was not until World War I that computing became a profession The First World War required large numbers of human computers Computers on both sides of the war produced map grids surveying aids navigation tables and artillery tables With the men at war most of these new computers were women and many were college educated 35 This would happen again during World War II as more men joined the fight college educated women were left to fill their positions One of the first female computers Elizabeth Webb Wilson was hired by the Army in 1918 and was a graduate of George Washington University Wilson patiently sought a war job that would make use of her mathematical skill In later years she would claim that the war spared her from the Washington social whirl the rounds of society events that should have procured for her a husband 35 and instead she was able to have a career After the war Wilson continued with a career in mathematics and became an actuary and turned her focus to life tables Human computers played integral roles in the World War II war effort in the United States and because of the depletion of the male labor force due to the draft many computers during World War II were women frequently with degrees in mathematics In the 1940s women were hired to examine nuclear and particle tracks left on photographic emulsions 36 In the Manhattan Project human computers working with a variety of mechanical aids assisted numerical studies of the complex formulas related to nuclear fission 37 Human computers were involved in calculating ballistics tables during World War I 38 Between the two world wars computers were used in the Department of Agriculture in the United States and also at Iowa State College 39 The human computers in these places also used calculating machines and early electrical computers to aid in their work 40 In the 1930s The Columbia University Statistical Bureau was created by Benjamin Wood 41 Organized computing was also established at Indiana University the Cowles Commission and the National Research Council 42 Following World War II the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics NACA used human computers in flight research to transcribe raw data from celluloid film and oscillograph paper and then using slide rules and electric calculators reduced the data to standard engineering units Margot Lee Shetterly s biographical book Hidden Figures made into a movie of the same name in 2016 depicts African American women who served as human computers at NASA in support of the Friendship 7 the first American crewed mission into Earth orbit 43 NACA had begun hiring black women as computers from 1940 44 One such computer was Dorothy Vaughan who began her work in 1943 with the Langley Research Center as a special hire to aid the war effort 45 and who came to supervise the West Area Computers a group of African American women who worked as computers at Langley Human computing was at the time considered menial work On November 8 2019 the Congressional Gold Medal was awarded In recognition of all the women who served as computers mathematicians and engineers at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA between the 1930s and the 1970s 46 nbsp Computers for the Explorer 1 trajectory As electrical computers became more available human computers especially women were drafted as some of the first computer programmers 47 Because the six people responsible for setting up problems on the ENIAC the first general purpose electronic digital computer built at the University of Pennsylvania during World War II were drafted from a corps of human computers the world s first professional computer programmers were women namely Kay McNulty Betty Snyder Marlyn Wescoff Ruth Lichterman Betty Jean Jennings and Fran Bilas 48 Human assisted computation editMain article Mental calculator The term human computer has been recently used by a group of researchers who refer to their work as human computation 49 In this usage human computer refers to activities of humans in the context of human based computation HBC This use of human computer is debatable for the following reason HBC is a computational technique where a machine outsources certain parts of a task to humans to perform which are not necessarily algorithmic In fact in the context of HBC most of the time humans are not provided with a sequence of exact steps to be executed to yield the desired result HBC is agnostic about how humans solve the problem This is why outsourcing is the term used in the definition above The use of humans in the historical role of human computers for HBC is very rare See also edit nbsp Mathematics portal Difference engine an early automatic mechanical calculator designed to replace human computers Mathematical Tables Project a project of the Works Progress Administration WPA that employed human computers Mentat fictional human computers in the Dune universe Women in computingNotes edit computer Oxford English Dictionary Third ed Oxford University Press March 2008 1613 R B Yong Mans Gleanings 1 I have read the truest computer of Times and the best Arithmetician that ever breathed and he reduceth thy dayes into a short number Turing 1950 Napier John 1889 1619 The Construction of the Wonderful Canon of Logarithms PDF Translated by Macdonald William Rae Edinburgh Blackwood amp Sons Also available on Wikisource Grier 2005 pp 22 25 Grier 2005 pp 29 30 Grier 2005 pp 30 Grier 2005 pp 29 Grier 2005 pp 31 Grier 2005 pp 61 Grier 2005 pp 50 Grier 2005 pp 50 51 Grier 2005 pp 54 a b Grier 2005 pp 81 a b Grier 2005 pp 77 Grier 2005 pp 76 Grier 2005 pp 76 77 Grier 2005 pp 82 83 a b Grier 2005 pp 82 Sobel 2016 p 31 Sobel 2016 p 105 Evans 2018 p 23 a b Sobel 2016 p 37 Sobel 2016 p 181 a b c Grier 2005 pp 106 Grier 2005 pp 106 107 Grier 2005 pp 107 108 a b Grier 2005 pp 108 Grier 2005 pp 110 a b c Grier 2005 pp 111 Campbell Kelly amp Croarken 2003 p 10 Grier 2005 pp 173 Beenakker C Lorentz and the Zuiderzee Project Instituut Lorenz for Theoretical Physics University of Leiden Retrieved November 19 2015 Hunt 1998 pp xiii xxxvi Roache 1998 a b Grier David Alan March 1 2001 Human Computers The First Pioneers of the Information Age Endeavour 25 1 28 32 doi 10 1016 S0160 9327 00 01338 7 PMID 11314458 Light 1999 p 459 Kean 2010 p 10 Grier 2005 pp 151 152 Grier 2005 pp 164 Grier 2005 pp 166 Grier 2005 pp 190 Grier 2005 pp 195 Howell Elizabeth January 24 2017 The Story of NASA s Real Hidden Figures Scientific American Retrieved January 26 2017 Evans 2018 pp 24 DOROTHY VAUGHAN nee JOHNSON PDF NASA February 3 2016 H R 1396 Hidden Figures Congressional Gold Medal Act Congress gov November 8 2019 Retrieved November 9 2019 Light 1999 p 462 ENIAC Programmers Project Awards Archived April 14 2013 at archive today Law amp von Ahn 2011 References editCampbell Kelly Martin Croarken Mary eds 2003 The History of Mathematical Tables From Sumer to Spreadsheets Oxford University Press p 10 ISBN 0198508417 Campbell Kelly Martin September 2009 The Origin of Computing Scientific American 301 3 62 9 Bibcode 2009SciAm 301c 62C doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0909 62 PMID 19708529 Evans Claire L 2018 Broad Band The Untold Story of the Women Who Made the Internet New York Portfolio Penguin ISBN 9780735211759 Grier David Alan May 11 2001 The Human Computer and the Birth of the Information Age Joseph Henry Lecture Philosophical Society of Washington Grier David Alan 2005 When Computers Were Human Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 09157 0 Archived from the original on August 21 2006 Retrieved January 24 2006 Hayles Katherine N 2005 My Mother Was a Computer Digital Subjects and Literary Texts Chicago The University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226321479 Excerpt Hunt J C R 1998 Lewis Fry Richardson and His Contribution to Mathematics Meteorology and Models of Conflict Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics 30 1 xiii xxxvi Bibcode 1998AnRFM 30D 13H doi 10 1146 annurev fluid 30 1 0 Kean Sam 2010 The Disappearing Spoon and other true tales from the Periodic Table London Black Swan p 108 ISBN 978 0 552 77750 6 Law Edith von Ahn Luis 2011 Human Computation Synthesis Lectures on Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning 5 3 1 121 doi 10 2200 S00371ED1V01Y201107AIM013 S2CID 12207236 Light Jennifer S 1999 When Computers Were Women Technology and Culture 40 3 455 483 doi 10 1353 tech 1999 0128 JSTOR 25147356 S2CID 108407884 Shetterly Margot Lee 2016 Hidden Figures The Story of the African American Women Who Helped Win the Space Race New York William Morrow and Company Roache Patrick J 1998 Verification and Validation in Computational Science and Engineering Hermosa Publishers ISBN 978 0 913478 08 0 Sobel Dava 2016 The Glass Universe How the Ladies of the Harvard Observatory Took the Measure of the Stars New York Penguin Books ISBN 9780143111344 Turing Alan Mathison 1950 Computing machinery and intelligence Mind 59 236 433 460 doi 10 1093 mind LIX 236 433 Wolverton Mark Fall 2011 Girl Computers American Heritage 61 2 Archived from the original on March 24 2013 Retrieved November 8 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Human computing Early NACA human computers at work photograph October 1949 The Age of Female Computers Archived June 16 2006 at the Wayback Machine by David Skinner Sonoma State University Archived April 22 2021 at the Wayback Machine Wellesley Description of model of H A Lorentz Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Computer occupation amp oldid 1218053996, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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