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SRI International

SRI International (SRI) is an American nonprofit scientific research institute and organization headquartered in Menlo Park, California. The trustees of Stanford University established SRI in 1946 as a center of innovation to support economic development in the region.

SRI International
Entrance to SRI International headquarters in Menlo Park
FormerlyStanford Research Institute (1946–1970)
Company type501(c)(3) nonprofit scientific research institute
Industry
FoundedMenlo Park, California
(1946; 78 years ago (1946))
FounderTrustees of Stanford University
HeadquartersMenlo Park, California, U.S.
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
David Parekh (CEO)
Services
RevenueUS$368 million (2020)[1]
Number of employees
2,100 (as of February 2015)[2]
Websitesri.com

The organization was founded as the Stanford Research Institute. SRI formally separated from Stanford University in 1970 and became known as SRI International in 1977. SRI performs client-sponsored research and development for government agencies, commercial businesses, and private foundations. It also licenses its technologies,[3] forms strategic partnerships, sells products,[4] and creates spin-off companies.[5] SRI's headquarters are located near the Stanford University campus.

SRI's annual revenue in 2014 was approximately $540 million, which tripled from 1998 under the leadership of Curtis Carlson. In 1998, the organization was on the verge of bankruptcy when Carlson took over as CEO. Over the next sixteen years with Carlson as CEO, the organizational culture of SRI was transformed. SRI tripled in size, became very profitable, and created many world-changing innovations, using the NABC framework. One of its best-known successes—Siri, the personal assistant on the iPhone—came from a company SRI created and then sold to Apple.[6] William A. Jeffrey served as SRI's president and CEO from September 2014 to December 2021. David Parekh is the chief executive officer as of December 2021.

SRI employs about 2,100 people.[2] Sarnoff Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of SRI since 1988, was fully integrated into SRI in January 2011.[7]

SRI's focus areas include biomedical sciences, chemistry and materials, computing, Earth and space systems, economic development, education and learning, energy and environmental technology, security and national defense, as well as sensing and devices.[8] SRI has received more than 4,000 patents and patent applications worldwide.[9]

History edit

Foundation edit

In the 1920s, Stanford University professor Robert E. Swain proposed creating a research institute in the Western United States. Herbert Hoover, then a trustee of Stanford University, was also an early proponent of an institute but became less involved with the project after he was elected president of the United States. The development of the institute was delayed by the Great Depression in the 1930s and World War II in the 1940s, with three separate attempts leading to its formation in 1946.[10]

In August 1945, Maurice Nelles, Morlan A. Visel, and Ernest L. Black of Lockheed made the first attempt to create the institute with the formation of the "Pacific Research Foundation" in Los Angeles.[11] A second attempt was made by Henry T. Heald, then president of the Illinois Institute of Technology. In 1945, Heald wrote a report recommending a research institute on the West Coast and a close association with Stanford University with an initial grant of $500,000 (equivalent to $6,477,000 in 2022).[12][13] A third attempt was made by Fred Terman, Stanford University's dean of engineering. Terman's proposal followed Heald's, but focused on faculty and student research more than contract research.[12]

The trustees of Stanford University voted to create the organization in 1946. It was structured so that its goals were aligned with the charter of the university—to advance scientific knowledge and to benefit the public at large, not just the students of Stanford University.[12] The trustees were named as the corporation's general members, and elected SRI's directors (later known as presidents); if the organization were dissolved, its assets would return to Stanford University.[14]

Research chemist William F. Talbot became the first director of the institute.[14] Stanford University president Donald Tresidder instructed Talbot to avoid work that would conflict with the interests of the university, particularly federal contracts that might attract political pressure.[14] The drive to find work and the lack of support from Stanford faculty caused the new research institute to violate this directive six months later through the pursuit of a contract with the Office of Naval Research.[15] This and other issues, including frustration with Tresidder's micromanagement of the new organization, caused Talbot to repeatedly offer his resignation, which Tresidder eventually accepted.[16] Talbot was replaced by Jesse Hobson, who had previously led the Armour Research Foundation, but the pursuit of contract work remained.[17]

Early history edit

 
SRI participant Paul Magill discussing the smog on Black Friday in Los Angeles at the first National Air Pollution Symposium in 1949

SRI's first research project investigated whether the guayule plant could be used as a source of natural rubber.[18] During World War II, rubber was imported into the U.S. and was subject to shortages and strict rationing.[18] From 1942 to 1946, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) supported a project to create a domestic source of natural rubber. Once the war ended, the United States Congress cut funding for the program; in response, the Office of Naval Research created a grant for the project to continue at SRI, and the USDA staff on the project worked through SRI until Congress reauthorized funding in 1947.[18]

SRI's first economic study was for the United States Air Force. In 1947, the Air Force wanted to determine the expansion potential of the U.S. aircraft industry; SRI found that it would take too long to escalate production in an emergency.[19] In 1948, SRI began research and consultation with Chevron Corporation to develop an artificial substitute for tallow and coconut oil in soap production; SRI's investigation confirmed the potential of dodecylbenzene as a suitable replacement. Later, Procter & Gamble used the substance as the basis for Tide laundry detergent.[20]

The institute performed much of the early research on air pollution and the formation of ozone in the lower atmosphere.[21] SRI sponsored the First National Air Pollution Symposium in Pasadena, California, in November 1949.[21] Experts gave presentations on pollution research, exchanged ideas and techniques, and stimulated interest in the field. The event was attended by 400 scientists, business executives, and civic leaders from the U.S.[21] SRI co-sponsored subsequent events on the subject.[22]

 
The ERMA system, which uses magnetic ink character recognition to process checks, was one of SRI's earliest developments.

In April 1953, Walt and Roy Disney hired SRI (and in particular, Harrison Price) to consult on their proposal for establishing an amusement park in Burbank, California.[23] SRI provided information on location, attendance patterns, and economic feasibility. SRI selected a larger site in Anaheim, prepared reports about operation, and provided on-site administrative support for Disneyland and acted in an advisory role as the park expanded.[23][24][25] In 1955, SRI was commissioned to select a site and provide design suggestions for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.[26]

In 1952, the Technicolor Corporation contracted with SRI to develop a near-instantaneous, electro-optical alternative to the manual process of timing during film copying.[27] In 1959, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented the Scientific and Engineering Award jointly to SRI and Technicolor for their work on the design and development of the Technicolor electronic printing timer which greatly benefited the motion picture industry.[28] In 1954, Southern Pacific asked SRI to investigate ways of reducing damage during rail freight shipments by mitigating shock to railroad box cars. This investigation led to William K. MacCurdy's development of the Hydra-Cushion technology, which remains standard today.[29][30]

In the 1950s, SRI worked under the direction of the Bank of America to develop ERMA (Electronic Recording Machine, Accounting) and magnetic ink character recognition (MICR). The ERMA project was led by computer scientist Jerre Noe, who was at the time SRI's assistant director of engineering.[31] As of 2011, MICR remains the industry standard in automated check processing.[32][33][34]

Rapid expansion edit

 
The first prototype of a computer mouse, as designed by Bill English

Douglas Engelbart, the founder of SRI's Augmentation Research Center (ARC), was the primary force behind the design and development of the multi-user oN-Line System (or NLS), featuring original versions of modern computer-human interface elements including bit-mapped displays, collaboration software, hypertext, and precursors to the graphical user interface such as the computer mouse.[35] As a pioneer of human-computer interaction, Engelbart is arguably SRI's most notable alumnus. He was awarded the National Medal of Technology and Innovation in 2000.[36]

Bill English, then chief engineer at ARC, built the first prototype of a computer mouse from Engelbart's design in 1964.[37][38] SRI also developed inkjet printing (1961) and optical disc recording (1963).[39] Liquid-crystal display (LCD) technology was developed at RCA Laboratories in the 1960s, which later became Sarnoff Corporation in 1988, a wholly owned subsidiary of SRI. Sarnoff was fully integrated into SRI in 2011.[40]

In the early 1960s, Hewitt Crane and his colleagues developed the world's first all-magnetic digital computer,[41] based upon extensions to magnetic core memories. The technology was licensed to AMP Inc., who then used it to build specialized computers for controlling tracks in the New York City Subway and on railroad switching yards.[42]

In 1966, SRI's Artificial Intelligence Center began working on "Shakey the robot", the first mobile robot to reason about its actions.[43] Equipped with a television camera, a triangulating rangefinder, and bump sensors, Shakey used software for perception, world-modeling, and acting. The project ended in 1972.[44] SRI's Artificial Intelligence Center marked its 45th anniversary in 2011.

 
The Packet Radio Van, developed by Don Cone, was the site of the first three-way internetworked transmission.

On October 29, 1969, the first connection on a wide area network to use packet switching, ARPANET, was established between nodes at Leonard Kleinrock's laboratory at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and Douglas Engelbart's laboratory at SRI using Interface Message Processors at both sites.[45][46] The following year, Engelbart's laboratory installed the first TENEX system outside of BBN where it was developed. In addition to SRI and UCLA, University of California, Santa Barbara and the University of Utah were part of the original four network nodes. By December 5, 1969, the entire four-node network was connected. In the 1970s, SRI developed packet-switched radio (a precursor to wireless networking),[47] over-the-horizon radar,[48][49] Deafnet,[50][51] vacuum microelectronics, and software-implemented fault tolerance.

The first true Internet transmission occurred on November 22, 1977, when SRI originated the first connection between three disparate networks. Data flowed seamlessly through the mobile Packet Radio Van between SRI in Menlo Park, California and the University of Southern California in Los Angeles via University College London, England, across three types of networks: packet radio, satellite, and the ARPANET.[52] In 2007, the Computer History Museum presented a 30th anniversary celebration of this demonstration, which included several participants from the 1977 event.[53] SRI would go on to run the Network Information Center under the leadership of Jake Feinler.[54]

Split and diversification edit

The Vietnam War (1955–1975) was an important issue on college campuses across the United States in the 1960s and 1970s. As a belated response to Vietnam War protesters who believed that funding from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) made the university part of the military–industrial complex,[55] the Stanford Research Institute split from Stanford University in 1970. The organization subsequently changed its name from the Stanford Research Institute to SRI International in 1977.[2][56][57]

 
Aerial image of SRI's Menlo Park campus

In 1972, physicists Harold E. Puthoff and Russell Targ undertook a series of investigations of psychic phenomena sponsored by the CIA, for which they coined the term remote viewing.[58][59][60][unreliable source?] Among other activities, the project encompassed the work of consulting "consciousness researchers" including artist/writer Ingo Swann, military intelligence officer Joseph McMoneagle, and psychic/illusionist Uri Geller.[61] This ESP work continued with funding from the US intelligence community until Puthoff and Targ left SRI in the mid-1980s.[62][63] For more information, see Parapsychology research at SRI.

Social scientist and consumer futurist Arnold Mitchell created the Values, Attitudes and Lifestyles (VALS) psychographic methodology in the late 1970s to explain changing U.S. values and lifestyles.[64] VALS was formally inaugurated as an SRI product in 1978 and was called "one of the ten top market research breakthroughs of the 1980s" by Advertising Age magazine.[65]

Throughout the 1980s, SRI developed Zylon,[66] stealth technologies, improvements to ultrasound imaging,[28] two-dimensional laser fluorescence imaging,[67] and many-sorted logic. In computing and software, SRI developed a multimedia electronic mail system, a theory of non-interference in computer security, a multilevel secure (MLS) relational database system called Seaview,[67] LaTeX,[68] Open Agent Architecture (OAA), a network intrusion detection system, the Maude system, a declarative software language, and PacketHop, a peer-to-peer wireless technology to create scalable ad hoc networks.[69] SRI's research in network intrusion detection led to the patent infringement case SRI International, Inc. v. Internet Security Systems, Inc.[70] The AI center's robotics research led to Shakey's successor, Flakey the robot, which focused on fuzzy logic.[71][72]

In 1986, SRI.com became the 8th registered ".com" domain.[73] The Artificial Intelligence Center developed the Procedural Reasoning System (PRS) in the late 1980s and into the early 1990s. PRS launched the field of BDI-based intelligent agents.[74] In the 1990s, SRI developed a letter sorting system for the United States Postal Service and several education and economic studies.[75]

Military-related technologies developed by SRI in the 1990s and 2000s include ground- and foliage-penetrating radar, the INCON and REDDE command and control system for the U.S. military,[76] and IGRS (integrated GPS radio system)—an advanced military personnel and vehicle tracking system. To train armored combat units during battle exercises, SRI developed the Deployable Force-on-Force Instrumented Range System (DFIRST), which uses GPS satellites, high-speed wireless communications, and digital terrain map displays.[77]

SRI created the Centibots in 2003, one of the first and largest teams of coordinated, autonomous mobile robots that explore, map, and survey unknown environments.[78][79][80][81] It also created BotHunter, a free utility for Unix, which detects botnet activity within a network.[82][83]

 
The IraqComm system

With DARPA-funded research, SRI contributed to the development of speech recognition and translation products[84][85] and was an active participant in DARPA's Global Autonomous Language Exploitation (GALE) program.[85] SRI developed DynaSpeak speech recognition technology which was used in the handheld VoxTec Phraselator, allowing U.S. soldiers overseas to communicate with local citizens in near real time.[86] SRI also created translation software for use in the IraqComm, a device which allows two-way, speech-to-speech machine translation between English and colloquial Iraqi Arabic.[87]

In medicine and chemistry, SRI developed dry-powder drugs,[88] laser photocoagulation (a treatment for some eye maladies),[89] remote surgery (also known as telerobotic surgery), bio-agent detection using upconverting phosphor technology, the experimental anticancer drugs Tirapazamine and TAS-108, ammonium dinitramide (an environmentally benign oxidizer for safe and cost-effective disposal of hazardous materials), the electroactive polymer ("artificial muscle"), new uses for diamagnetic levitation, and the antimalarial drug Halofantrine.[28][90]

SRI performed a study in the 1990s for Whirlpool Corporation that led to modern self-cleaning ovens.[91] In the 2000s, SRI worked on Pathway Tools software for use in bioinformatics and systems biology to accelerate drug discovery using artificial intelligence and symbolic computing techniques.[92] The software system generates the BioCyc database collection, SRI's growing collection of genomic databases used by biologists to visualize genes within a chromosome, complete biochemical pathways, and full metabolic maps of organisms.[93]

Early 21st century edit

SRI researchers made the first observation of visible light emitted by oxygen atoms in the night-side airglow of Venus, offering new insight into the planet's atmosphere.[94][95][96] SRI education researchers conducted the first national evaluation of the growing U.S. charter schools movement. For the World Golf Foundation, SRI compiled the first-ever estimate of the overall scope of the U.S. golf industry's goods and services ($62 billion in 2000), providing a framework for monitoring the long-term growth of the industry.[97][98] In April 2000, SRI formed Atomic Tangerine, an independent consulting firm designed to bring new technologies and services to market.[99]

 
A building on SRI International's campus

In 2006, SRI was awarded a $56.9 million contract with the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases to provide preclinical services for the development of drugs and antibodies for anti-infective treatments for avian influenza, SARS, West Nile virus and hepatitis.[100] Also in 2006, SRI selected St. Petersburg, Florida, as the site for a new marine technology research facility targeted at ocean science, the maritime industry and port security; the facility is a collaboration with the University of South Florida College of Marine Science and its Center for Ocean Technology.[101][102][103] That facility created a new method for underwater mass spectrometry, which has been used to conduct "advanced underwater chemical surveys in oil and gas exploration and production, ocean resource monitoring and protection, and water treatment and management" and was licensed to Spyglass Technologies in March 2014.[104]

In December 2007, SRI launched a spin-off company, Siri Inc., which Apple acquired in April 2010.[105] In October 2011, Apple announced the Siri personal assistant as an integrated feature of the Apple iPhone 4S.[106] Siri's technology was born from SRI's work on the DARPA-funded CALO project, described by SRI as the largest artificial intelligence project ever launched.[107] Siri was co-founded in December 2007 by Dag Kittlaus (CEO), Adam Cheyer (vice president, engineering), and Tom Gruber (CTO/vice president, design), together with Norman Winarsky (vice president of SRI Ventures). Investors included Menlo Ventures and Morgenthaler Ventures.[108]

For the National Science Foundation (NSF), SRI operates the advanced modular incoherent scatter radar (AMISR), a novel relocatable atmospheric research facility.[109] Other SRI-operated research facilities for the NSF include the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico and the Sondrestrom Upper Atmospheric Research Facility in Greenland. In May 2011, SRI was awarded a $42 million contract to operate the Arecibo Observatory from October 1, 2011, to September 30, 2016.[110] The institute also manages the Hat Creek Radio Observatory in Northern California, home of the Allen Telescope Array.[111]

In February 2014, SRI announced a "photonics-based testing technology called FASTcell" for the detection and characterization of rare circulating tumor cells from blood samples. The test is aimed at cancer-specific biomarkers for breast, lung, prostate, colorectal and leukemia cancers that circulate in the blood stream in minute quantities, potentially diagnosing those conditions earlier.[112]

In September 2018, the NSF announced that SRI International will be rewarded $4.4 million to establish the backbone organization of a national network.[113]

In April 2023, Xerox announced that it would donate PARC and its related assets to SRI. As part of the deal, Xerox would keep most of the patent rights inside PARC, and benefit from a preferred research agreement with SRI/PARC.[114]

Description edit

 
SRI awards by source[115]
  Department of Defense (63%)
  National Institutes of Health (11%)
  Business and industry (8%)
  US State and Local (6%)
  US National Science Foundation (6%)
  US Department of Education (4%)
  Foundations (2%)

Employees and financials edit

As of February 2015, SRI employs approximately 2,100 people.[2] In 2014, SRI had about $540 million in revenue.[2] In 2013, the United States Department of Defense consisted of 63% of awards by value; the remainder was composed of the National Institutes of Health (11%); businesses and industry (8%); other United States agencies (6%); the National Science Foundation (6%); the United States Department of Education (4%); and foundations (2%).[115]

As of February 2015, approximately 4,000 patents have been granted to SRI International and its employees.[9]

Facilities edit

SRI is primarily based on a 63-acre (0.25 km2; 0.10 sq mi) campus located in Menlo Park, California, which is considered part of Silicon Valley. This campus encompasses 1,300,000 square feet (120,000 m2) of office and lab space.[116] In addition, SRI has a 254-acre (1.028 km2; 0.397 sq mi) campus in Princeton, New Jersey, with 600,000 square feet (56,000 m2) of research space. There are also offices in Washington, D.C., and Tokyo, Japan. In total, SRI has 2,300,000 square feet (210,000 m2) of office and laboratory space.[116]

Organization edit

SRI International is organized into seven units (generally referred to as divisions) that focus on specific subject areas.[117]

Name Research area Reference
Advanced Technology and Systems SRI's largest organizational unit manages complex projects for government and commercial clients in areas such as chemistry, physics, and materials science; geospace studies and space and marine technology; surveillance and remote sensing; applied optics and secure circuits; and robotics, medical devices, and nanotechnology. [118]
Biosciences SRI Biosciences works with academic, commercial, foundation, and government clients and partners to bring new medicines to market through basic research, pharmaceutical discovery, pre-clinical development, and clinical translation. SRI has helped move more than 100 drugs into clinical trials. [119][120]
Education SRI Education works with government officials, private foundations, and commercial clients to provide research-based analysis and evaluation of programs to identify trends, understand outcomes, and guide public policy and practice. Focus areas include early learning, educational technology, social and emotional learning, teacher quality assessments, college and career readiness, and large-scale surveys. [121]
Global Partnerships It comprises three groups: the Center for Science, Technology, and Economic Development, the Center for Innovation Leadership, the Energy Center, and a team focused on R&D programs for international clients. [122]
Information and Computing Sciences For its government and commercial clients, this division conducts R&D activities to understand the computational principles underlying intelligence in humans and machines, and to create computer-based systems that solve problems. ICS is organized into four laboratories, one of which is SRI's Artificial Intelligence Center. The division focuses on artificial intelligence, speech recognition, natural language processing, bioinformatics, and computer security. [123]
Mission Solutions Mission Solutions performs technology and services in support U.S. government-deployed systems. The division focuses on information operations, navigation and survivability systems, and systems and signal technology. [124]
Products and Solutions This SRI division transitions R&D technology into products for its government and commercial clients. It maintains a portfolio that includes biometric identification systems, real-time video processing systems, integrated video and sensor exploitation solutions, and video test tools. [125]

Staff members and alumni edit

 
Curtis Carlson
 
Douglas Engelbart

SRI has had a chief executive of some form since its establishment. Prior to the split with Stanford University, the position was known as the director; after the split, it is known as the company's president and CEO. SRI has had nine so far, including William F. Talbot (1946–1947),[17] Jesse E. Hobson (1947–1955),[126] E. Finley Carter (1956–1963),[127] Charles Anderson (1968–1979),[128] William F. Miller (1979–1990),[129] James J. Tietjen (1990–1993),[130] William P. Sommers (1993–1998)[131] Curtis Carlson (1998–2014).[132] More recently, the role was split into two. The current CEO is David Parekh[133] and the president is Manish Kothari (formerly president of SRI Ventures).

SRI also has had a board of directors since its inception, which has served to both guide and provide opportunities for the organization. The current board of directors includes Samuel Armacost (Chairman of the Board Emeritus), Mariann Byerwalter (chairman), William A. Jeffrey, Charles A. Holloway (vice chairman), Vern Clark, Robert L. Joss, Leslie F. Kenne, Henry Kressel, David Liddle, Philip J. Quigley, Wendell Wierenga and John J. Young Jr.[134]

Its notable researchers include Elmer Robinson (meteorologist), co-author of the 1968 SRI report to the American Petroleum Institute (API) on the risks of fossil fuel burning to the global climate.[135] Many notable researchers were involved with the Augmentation Research Center. These include Douglas Engelbart, the developer of the modern GUI;[136] William English, the inventor of the mouse;[137] Jeff Rulifson, the primary developer of the NLS;[138] Elizabeth J. Feinler, who ran the Network Information Center;[139] and David Maynard, who would help found Electronic Arts.[140]

The Artificial Intelligence Center has also produced a large number of notable alumni, many of whom contributed to Shakey the robot;[141] these include project manager Charles Rosen,[142] as well as Nils Nilsson,[143] Bertram Raphael,[141] Richard O. Duda,[144] Peter E. Hart,[144] Richard Fikes,[145] and Richard Waldinger.[146] AI researcher Gary Hendrix went on to found Symantec.[147][148] Former Yahoo! President and CEO Marissa Mayer performed a research internship in the Center in the 1990s.[149] The CALO project (and its spin-off, Siri) also produced notable names including C. Raymond Perrault and Adam Cheyer.[150][151]

Several SRI projects produced notable researchers and engineers long before computing was mainstream. Early employee Paul M. Cook founded Raychem.[152] William K. MacCurdy developed the Hydra-Cushion freight car for Southern Pacific in 1954;[29] Hewitt Crane and Jerre Noe were instrumental in the development of Electronic Recording Machine, Accounting;[42] Harrison Price helped The Walt Disney Company design Disneyland;[24] James C. Bliss developed the Optacon;[153] and Robert Weitbrecht invented the first telecommunications device for the deaf.[154][155]

Spin-off companies edit

 
Intuitive Surgical's robotic surgery system, the da Vinci Surgical System

Working with investment and venture capital firms, SRI and its former employees have launched more than 60 spin-off ventures[156] in a wide range of fields, including Siri (acquired by Apple), Tempo AI (acquired by Salesforce.com), Redwood Robotics (acquired by Google), Desti (acquired by HERE), Grabit, Kasisto, Passio, Artificial Muscle, Inc. (acquired by Bayer MaterialScience), Nuance Communications, Intuitive Surgical, Ravenswood Solutions, and Orchid Cellmark.[5][157][158]

Some former SRI staff members have also established new companies. In engineering and analysis, for example, notable companies formed by SRI alumni include Weitbrecht Communications,[159] Exponent and Raychem.[158] Companies in the area of legal, policy and business analysis include Fair Isaac Corporation, Global Business Network and Institute for the Future.[158]

Research in computing and computer science-related areas led to the development of many companies, including Symantec, the Australian Artificial Intelligence Institute, E-Trade, and Verbatim Corporation. Wireless technologies spawned Firetide and venture capital firm enVia Partners.[158] Health systems research inspired Telesensory Systems.[158][160]

See also edit

  San Francisco Bay Area portal

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Tax Filings and Audits by Year". ProPublica. 9 May 2013. Retrieved 2023-02-01.
  2. ^ a b c d e "About Us". SRI International. Retrieved 2015-09-01.
  3. ^ . SRI International. Archived from the original on 2015-04-29. Retrieved 2013-07-01.
  4. ^ . SRI International. Archived from the original on 2015-04-29. Retrieved 2014-05-17.
  5. ^ a b "SRI Ventures". SRI International. Retrieved 2013-07-01.
  6. ^ "How To Create An Innovative Culture: The Extraordinary Case Of SRI". Forbes. Retrieved 2022-01-29.
  7. ^ "SRI International Completes Integration of Sarnoff Corporation" (Press release). SRI International. 2011-01-01. Retrieved 2002-07-01.
  8. ^ "SRI International". SRI International. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  9. ^ a b "About Us". SRI International. 2014-10-20. Retrieved 2015-02-05.
  10. ^ Nielson, p. 1-1
  11. ^ Nielson, p. B-1
  12. ^ a b c Nielson, p. B-2
  13. ^ Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved November 30, 2023. United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series.
  14. ^ a b c Nielson, p. B-3
  15. ^ Nielson, p. B-4
  16. ^ Gibson, SRI: The Founding Years, pp. 111–112
  17. ^ a b Lowen, Rebecca (July–August 1997). "Exploiting a Wonderful Opportunity". Stanford Magazine. Stanford Alumni Association. Retrieved 2012-09-23.
  18. ^ a b c Gibson, SRI: The Founding Years, pp. 98–99
  19. ^ Gibson, SRI: The Founding Years, p. 108
  20. ^ . SRI International. Archived from the original on 2006-11-30. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  21. ^ a b c Nielson, pp. 9-18 - 9-21
  22. ^ Gibson, Weldon B. (1986). SRI: The Take-Off Days. Los Altos, California: Stanford Research Institute. pp. 48, 55, 149, 168, 181. ISBN 978-0-86576-103-2.
  23. ^ a b Nielson, pp. 14–17 - 14-20
  24. ^ a b "Disneyland". Timeline of Innovations. SRI International. Retrieved 2013-07-01.
  25. ^ Katz, Leslie (2010-07-19). "Star-studded celebration of Disneyland's 55th year". The San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved 2013-07-01.
  26. ^ . SRI International. Archived from the original on 2006-11-29. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  27. ^ McLaughlin, p. 39
  28. ^ a b c McLaughlin, p. 40
  29. ^ a b Nielson, pp. 6-1 - 6-3
  30. ^ "Railroad Hydra-Cushion". Timeline of Innovations. SRI International. Retrieved 2013-07-01.
  31. ^ Nielson, p. 2-8
  32. ^ Nielson, p. 2-1
  33. ^ "Timeline of Innovations: Electronic Recording Machine, Accounting". SRI International. Retrieved 2012-07-15.
  34. ^ "Magnetic Ink Character Recognition Line Law & Legal Definition". USLegal. Retrieved 2011-11-12.
  35. ^ . Hall of Fellows. Computer History Museum. Archived from the original on 2012-07-02. Retrieved 2012-06-17.
  36. ^ "Douglas Engelbart, Foresight Advisor, Is Awarded National Medal of Technology". Foresight Update. Vol. 43. Foresight Institute. 2000-12-30.
  37. ^ "How the mouse got its name". BBC News. 2008-12-08. Retrieved 2011-11-12.
  38. ^ DARPA, pp. 76–77
  39. ^ McLaughlin, p. 37
  40. ^ "Milestones: Liquid Crystal Display, 1968". IEEE Global History Network. IEEE. Retrieved 2012-04-15.
  41. ^ "All-Magnetic Logic Computer". Timeline of Innovations. SRI International. Retrieved 2013-07-01.
  42. ^ a b Markoff, John (2008-06-21). "Hewitt D. Crane, 81, Early Computer Engineer, Is Dead". The New York Times. Retrieved 2012-04-01.
  43. ^ Movie "Shakey". Stanford Research Institute. 1969. In 1966, the Stanford Research Institute created the first mobile robot that could reason about its surroundings.
  44. ^ . SRI International. Archived from the original on 2013-05-04. Retrieved 2012-07-17.
  45. ^ Sutton, Chris (2004-09-14). "Internet Began 35 Years Ago at UCLA with First Message Ever Sent Between Two Computers". UCLA. Retrieved 2011-11-12.
  46. ^ DARPA, pp. 79-83
  47. ^ Lewis, Mark G.; Garcia-Luna-Aceves, J. J. (1987-10-19). "Packet-Switching Applique for Tactical VHF Radios". Crisis Communications: The Promise and Reality. IEEE MILCOM 1987. 2: 0449–0455. doi:10.1109/MILCOM.1987.4795249. S2CID 44026046.
  48. ^ . SRI International. Archived from the original on 2011-07-20. Retrieved 2012-05-06.
  49. ^ Thomason, Joseph F. (2005-04-14). . United States Naval Research Laboratory. Archived from the original on December 1, 2012. Retrieved 2012-07-01.
  50. ^ "Telecommunications Tools for the Deaf". Timeline of Innovations. SRI International. Retrieved 2013-07-01.
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Works cited edit

Further reading edit

SRI history edit

Specific topics edit

External links edit

  • SRI International website

37°27′24″N 122°10′31″W / 37.4566°N 122.1753°W / 37.4566; -122.1753

international, confused, with, international, american, nonprofit, scientific, research, institute, organization, headquartered, menlo, park, california, trustees, stanford, university, established, 1946, center, innovation, support, economic, development, reg. Not to be confused with SRA International SRI International SRI is an American nonprofit scientific research institute and organization headquartered in Menlo Park California The trustees of Stanford University established SRI in 1946 as a center of innovation to support economic development in the region SRI InternationalEntrance to SRI International headquarters in Menlo ParkFormerlyStanford Research Institute 1946 1970 Company type501 c 3 nonprofit scientific research instituteIndustryResearch and developmentFoundedMenlo Park California 1946 78 years ago 1946 FounderTrustees of Stanford UniversityHeadquartersMenlo Park California U S Area servedWorldwideKey peopleDavid Parekh CEO ServicesScientific researchRevenueUS 368 million 2020 1 Number of employees2 100 as of February 2015 2 Websitesri wbr comThe organization was founded as the Stanford Research Institute SRI formally separated from Stanford University in 1970 and became known as SRI International in 1977 SRI performs client sponsored research and development for government agencies commercial businesses and private foundations It also licenses its technologies 3 forms strategic partnerships sells products 4 and creates spin off companies 5 SRI s headquarters are located near the Stanford University campus SRI s annual revenue in 2014 was approximately 540 million which tripled from 1998 under the leadership of Curtis Carlson In 1998 the organization was on the verge of bankruptcy when Carlson took over as CEO Over the next sixteen years with Carlson as CEO the organizational culture of SRI was transformed SRI tripled in size became very profitable and created many world changing innovations using the NABC framework One of its best known successes Siri the personal assistant on the iPhone came from a company SRI created and then sold to Apple 6 William A Jeffrey served as SRI s president and CEO from September 2014 to December 2021 David Parekh is the chief executive officer as of December 2021 SRI employs about 2 100 people 2 Sarnoff Corporation a wholly owned subsidiary of SRI since 1988 was fully integrated into SRI in January 2011 7 SRI s focus areas include biomedical sciences chemistry and materials computing Earth and space systems economic development education and learning energy and environmental technology security and national defense as well as sensing and devices 8 SRI has received more than 4 000 patents and patent applications worldwide 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Early history 1 3 Rapid expansion 1 4 Split and diversification 1 5 Early 21st century 2 Description 2 1 Employees and financials 2 2 Facilities 2 3 Organization 3 Staff members and alumni 4 Spin off companies 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Works cited 7 Further reading 7 1 SRI history 7 2 Specific topics 8 External linksHistory editFoundation edit In the 1920s Stanford University professor Robert E Swain proposed creating a research institute in the Western United States Herbert Hoover then a trustee of Stanford University was also an early proponent of an institute but became less involved with the project after he was elected president of the United States The development of the institute was delayed by the Great Depression in the 1930s and World War II in the 1940s with three separate attempts leading to its formation in 1946 10 In August 1945 Maurice Nelles Morlan A Visel and Ernest L Black of Lockheed made the first attempt to create the institute with the formation of the Pacific Research Foundation in Los Angeles 11 A second attempt was made by Henry T Heald then president of the Illinois Institute of Technology In 1945 Heald wrote a report recommending a research institute on the West Coast and a close association with Stanford University with an initial grant of 500 000 equivalent to 6 477 000 in 2022 12 13 A third attempt was made by Fred Terman Stanford University s dean of engineering Terman s proposal followed Heald s but focused on faculty and student research more than contract research 12 The trustees of Stanford University voted to create the organization in 1946 It was structured so that its goals were aligned with the charter of the university to advance scientific knowledge and to benefit the public at large not just the students of Stanford University 12 The trustees were named as the corporation s general members and elected SRI s directors later known as presidents if the organization were dissolved its assets would return to Stanford University 14 Research chemist William F Talbot became the first director of the institute 14 Stanford University president Donald Tresidder instructed Talbot to avoid work that would conflict with the interests of the university particularly federal contracts that might attract political pressure 14 The drive to find work and the lack of support from Stanford faculty caused the new research institute to violate this directive six months later through the pursuit of a contract with the Office of Naval Research 15 This and other issues including frustration with Tresidder s micromanagement of the new organization caused Talbot to repeatedly offer his resignation which Tresidder eventually accepted 16 Talbot was replaced by Jesse Hobson who had previously led the Armour Research Foundation but the pursuit of contract work remained 17 Early history edit nbsp SRI participant Paul Magill discussing the smog on Black Friday in Los Angeles at the first National Air Pollution Symposium in 1949SRI s first research project investigated whether the guayule plant could be used as a source of natural rubber 18 During World War II rubber was imported into the U S and was subject to shortages and strict rationing 18 From 1942 to 1946 the United States Department of Agriculture USDA supported a project to create a domestic source of natural rubber Once the war ended the United States Congress cut funding for the program in response the Office of Naval Research created a grant for the project to continue at SRI and the USDA staff on the project worked through SRI until Congress reauthorized funding in 1947 18 SRI s first economic study was for the United States Air Force In 1947 the Air Force wanted to determine the expansion potential of the U S aircraft industry SRI found that it would take too long to escalate production in an emergency 19 In 1948 SRI began research and consultation with Chevron Corporation to develop an artificial substitute for tallow and coconut oil in soap production SRI s investigation confirmed the potential of dodecylbenzene as a suitable replacement Later Procter amp Gamble used the substance as the basis for Tide laundry detergent 20 The institute performed much of the early research on air pollution and the formation of ozone in the lower atmosphere 21 SRI sponsored the First National Air Pollution Symposium in Pasadena California in November 1949 21 Experts gave presentations on pollution research exchanged ideas and techniques and stimulated interest in the field The event was attended by 400 scientists business executives and civic leaders from the U S 21 SRI co sponsored subsequent events on the subject 22 nbsp The ERMA system which uses magnetic ink character recognition to process checks was one of SRI s earliest developments In April 1953 Walt and Roy Disney hired SRI and in particular Harrison Price to consult on their proposal for establishing an amusement park in Burbank California 23 SRI provided information on location attendance patterns and economic feasibility SRI selected a larger site in Anaheim prepared reports about operation and provided on site administrative support for Disneyland and acted in an advisory role as the park expanded 23 24 25 In 1955 SRI was commissioned to select a site and provide design suggestions for the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts 26 In 1952 the Technicolor Corporation contracted with SRI to develop a near instantaneous electro optical alternative to the manual process of timing during film copying 27 In 1959 the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented the Scientific and Engineering Award jointly to SRI and Technicolor for their work on the design and development of the Technicolor electronic printing timer which greatly benefited the motion picture industry 28 In 1954 Southern Pacific asked SRI to investigate ways of reducing damage during rail freight shipments by mitigating shock to railroad box cars This investigation led to William K MacCurdy s development of the Hydra Cushion technology which remains standard today 29 30 In the 1950s SRI worked under the direction of the Bank of America to develop ERMA Electronic Recording Machine Accounting and magnetic ink character recognition MICR The ERMA project was led by computer scientist Jerre Noe who was at the time SRI s assistant director of engineering 31 As of 2011 MICR remains the industry standard in automated check processing 32 33 34 Rapid expansion edit nbsp The first prototype of a computer mouse as designed by Bill EnglishDouglas Engelbart the founder of SRI s Augmentation Research Center ARC was the primary force behind the design and development of the multi user oN Line System or NLS featuring original versions of modern computer human interface elements including bit mapped displays collaboration software hypertext and precursors to the graphical user interface such as the computer mouse 35 As a pioneer of human computer interaction Engelbart is arguably SRI s most notable alumnus He was awarded the National Medal of Technology and Innovation in 2000 36 Bill English then chief engineer at ARC built the first prototype of a computer mouse from Engelbart s design in 1964 37 38 SRI also developed inkjet printing 1961 and optical disc recording 1963 39 Liquid crystal display LCD technology was developed at RCA Laboratories in the 1960s which later became Sarnoff Corporation in 1988 a wholly owned subsidiary of SRI Sarnoff was fully integrated into SRI in 2011 40 In the early 1960s Hewitt Crane and his colleagues developed the world s first all magnetic digital computer 41 based upon extensions to magnetic core memories The technology was licensed to AMP Inc who then used it to build specialized computers for controlling tracks in the New York City Subway and on railroad switching yards 42 In 1966 SRI s Artificial Intelligence Center began working on Shakey the robot the first mobile robot to reason about its actions 43 Equipped with a television camera a triangulating rangefinder and bump sensors Shakey used software for perception world modeling and acting The project ended in 1972 44 SRI s Artificial Intelligence Center marked its 45th anniversary in 2011 nbsp The Packet Radio Van developed by Don Cone was the site of the first three way internetworked transmission On October 29 1969 the first connection on a wide area network to use packet switching ARPANET was established between nodes at Leonard Kleinrock s laboratory at University of California Los Angeles UCLA and Douglas Engelbart s laboratory at SRI using Interface Message Processors at both sites 45 46 The following year Engelbart s laboratory installed the first TENEX system outside of BBN where it was developed In addition to SRI and UCLA University of California Santa Barbara and the University of Utah were part of the original four network nodes By December 5 1969 the entire four node network was connected In the 1970s SRI developed packet switched radio a precursor to wireless networking 47 over the horizon radar 48 49 Deafnet 50 51 vacuum microelectronics and software implemented fault tolerance The first true Internet transmission occurred on November 22 1977 when SRI originated the first connection between three disparate networks Data flowed seamlessly through the mobile Packet Radio Van between SRI in Menlo Park California and the University of Southern California in Los Angeles via University College London England across three types of networks packet radio satellite and the ARPANET 52 In 2007 the Computer History Museum presented a 30th anniversary celebration of this demonstration which included several participants from the 1977 event 53 SRI would go on to run the Network Information Center under the leadership of Jake Feinler 54 Split and diversification edit The Vietnam War 1955 1975 was an important issue on college campuses across the United States in the 1960s and 1970s As a belated response to Vietnam War protesters who believed that funding from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency DARPA made the university part of the military industrial complex 55 the Stanford Research Institute split from Stanford University in 1970 The organization subsequently changed its name from the Stanford Research Institute to SRI International in 1977 2 56 57 nbsp Aerial image of SRI s Menlo Park campusIn 1972 physicists Harold E Puthoff and Russell Targ undertook a series of investigations of psychic phenomena sponsored by the CIA for which they coined the term remote viewing 58 59 60 unreliable source Among other activities the project encompassed the work of consulting consciousness researchers including artist writer Ingo Swann military intelligence officer Joseph McMoneagle and psychic illusionist Uri Geller 61 This ESP work continued with funding from the US intelligence community until Puthoff and Targ left SRI in the mid 1980s 62 63 For more information see Parapsychology research at SRI Social scientist and consumer futurist Arnold Mitchell created the Values Attitudes and Lifestyles VALS psychographic methodology in the late 1970s to explain changing U S values and lifestyles 64 VALS was formally inaugurated as an SRI product in 1978 and was called one of the ten top market research breakthroughs of the 1980s by Advertising Age magazine 65 Throughout the 1980s SRI developed Zylon 66 stealth technologies improvements to ultrasound imaging 28 two dimensional laser fluorescence imaging 67 and many sorted logic In computing and software SRI developed a multimedia electronic mail system a theory of non interference in computer security a multilevel secure MLS relational database system called Seaview 67 LaTeX 68 Open Agent Architecture OAA a network intrusion detection system the Maude system a declarative software language and PacketHop a peer to peer wireless technology to create scalable ad hoc networks 69 SRI s research in network intrusion detection led to the patent infringement case SRI International Inc v Internet Security Systems Inc 70 The AI center s robotics research led to Shakey s successor Flakey the robot which focused on fuzzy logic 71 72 In 1986 SRI com became the 8th registered com domain 73 The Artificial Intelligence Center developed the Procedural Reasoning System PRS in the late 1980s and into the early 1990s PRS launched the field of BDI based intelligent agents 74 In the 1990s SRI developed a letter sorting system for the United States Postal Service and several education and economic studies 75 Military related technologies developed by SRI in the 1990s and 2000s include ground and foliage penetrating radar the INCON and REDDE command and control system for the U S military 76 and IGRS integrated GPS radio system an advanced military personnel and vehicle tracking system To train armored combat units during battle exercises SRI developed the Deployable Force on Force Instrumented Range System DFIRST which uses GPS satellites high speed wireless communications and digital terrain map displays 77 SRI created the Centibots in 2003 one of the first and largest teams of coordinated autonomous mobile robots that explore map and survey unknown environments 78 79 80 81 It also created BotHunter a free utility for Unix which detects botnet activity within a network 82 83 nbsp The IraqComm systemWith DARPA funded research SRI contributed to the development of speech recognition and translation products 84 85 and was an active participant in DARPA s Global Autonomous Language Exploitation GALE program 85 SRI developed DynaSpeak speech recognition technology which was used in the handheld VoxTec Phraselator allowing U S soldiers overseas to communicate with local citizens in near real time 86 SRI also created translation software for use in the IraqComm a device which allows two way speech to speech machine translation between English and colloquial Iraqi Arabic 87 In medicine and chemistry SRI developed dry powder drugs 88 laser photocoagulation a treatment for some eye maladies 89 remote surgery also known as telerobotic surgery bio agent detection using upconverting phosphor technology the experimental anticancer drugs Tirapazamine and TAS 108 ammonium dinitramide an environmentally benign oxidizer for safe and cost effective disposal of hazardous materials the electroactive polymer artificial muscle new uses for diamagnetic levitation and the antimalarial drug Halofantrine 28 90 SRI performed a study in the 1990s for Whirlpool Corporation that led to modern self cleaning ovens 91 In the 2000s SRI worked on Pathway Tools software for use in bioinformatics and systems biology to accelerate drug discovery using artificial intelligence and symbolic computing techniques 92 The software system generates the BioCyc database collection SRI s growing collection of genomic databases used by biologists to visualize genes within a chromosome complete biochemical pathways and full metabolic maps of organisms 93 Early 21st century edit SRI researchers made the first observation of visible light emitted by oxygen atoms in the night side airglow of Venus offering new insight into the planet s atmosphere 94 95 96 SRI education researchers conducted the first national evaluation of the growing U S charter schools movement For the World Golf Foundation SRI compiled the first ever estimate of the overall scope of the U S golf industry s goods and services 62 billion in 2000 providing a framework for monitoring the long term growth of the industry 97 98 In April 2000 SRI formed Atomic Tangerine an independent consulting firm designed to bring new technologies and services to market 99 nbsp A building on SRI International s campusIn 2006 SRI was awarded a 56 9 million contract with the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases to provide preclinical services for the development of drugs and antibodies for anti infective treatments for avian influenza SARS West Nile virus and hepatitis 100 Also in 2006 SRI selected St Petersburg Florida as the site for a new marine technology research facility targeted at ocean science the maritime industry and port security the facility is a collaboration with the University of South Florida College of Marine Science and its Center for Ocean Technology 101 102 103 That facility created a new method for underwater mass spectrometry which has been used to conduct advanced underwater chemical surveys in oil and gas exploration and production ocean resource monitoring and protection and water treatment and management and was licensed to Spyglass Technologies in March 2014 104 In December 2007 SRI launched a spin off company Siri Inc which Apple acquired in April 2010 105 In October 2011 Apple announced the Siri personal assistant as an integrated feature of the Apple iPhone 4S 106 Siri s technology was born from SRI s work on the DARPA funded CALO project described by SRI as the largest artificial intelligence project ever launched 107 Siri was co founded in December 2007 by Dag Kittlaus CEO Adam Cheyer vice president engineering and Tom Gruber CTO vice president design together with Norman Winarsky vice president of SRI Ventures Investors included Menlo Ventures and Morgenthaler Ventures 108 For the National Science Foundation NSF SRI operates the advanced modular incoherent scatter radar AMISR a novel relocatable atmospheric research facility 109 Other SRI operated research facilities for the NSF include the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico and the Sondrestrom Upper Atmospheric Research Facility in Greenland In May 2011 SRI was awarded a 42 million contract to operate the Arecibo Observatory from October 1 2011 to September 30 2016 110 The institute also manages the Hat Creek Radio Observatory in Northern California home of the Allen Telescope Array 111 In February 2014 SRI announced a photonics based testing technology called FASTcell for the detection and characterization of rare circulating tumor cells from blood samples The test is aimed at cancer specific biomarkers for breast lung prostate colorectal and leukemia cancers that circulate in the blood stream in minute quantities potentially diagnosing those conditions earlier 112 In September 2018 the NSF announced that SRI International will be rewarded 4 4 million to establish the backbone organization of a national network 113 In April 2023 Xerox announced that it would donate PARC and its related assets to SRI As part of the deal Xerox would keep most of the patent rights inside PARC and benefit from a preferred research agreement with SRI PARC 114 Description edit nbsp SRI awards by source 115 Department of Defense 63 National Institutes of Health 11 Business and industry 8 US State and Local 6 US National Science Foundation 6 US Department of Education 4 Foundations 2 Employees and financials edit As of February 2015 SRI employs approximately 2 100 people 2 In 2014 SRI had about 540 million in revenue 2 In 2013 the United States Department of Defense consisted of 63 of awards by value the remainder was composed of the National Institutes of Health 11 businesses and industry 8 other United States agencies 6 the National Science Foundation 6 the United States Department of Education 4 and foundations 2 115 As of February 2015 approximately 4 000 patents have been granted to SRI International and its employees 9 Facilities edit SRI is primarily based on a 63 acre 0 25 km2 0 10 sq mi campus located in Menlo Park California which is considered part of Silicon Valley This campus encompasses 1 300 000 square feet 120 000 m2 of office and lab space 116 In addition SRI has a 254 acre 1 028 km2 0 397 sq mi campus in Princeton New Jersey with 600 000 square feet 56 000 m2 of research space There are also offices in Washington D C and Tokyo Japan In total SRI has 2 300 000 square feet 210 000 m2 of office and laboratory space 116 Organization edit SRI International is organized into seven units generally referred to as divisions that focus on specific subject areas 117 Name Research area ReferenceAdvanced Technology and Systems SRI s largest organizational unit manages complex projects for government and commercial clients in areas such as chemistry physics and materials science geospace studies and space and marine technology surveillance and remote sensing applied optics and secure circuits and robotics medical devices and nanotechnology 118 Biosciences SRI Biosciences works with academic commercial foundation and government clients and partners to bring new medicines to market through basic research pharmaceutical discovery pre clinical development and clinical translation SRI has helped move more than 100 drugs into clinical trials 119 120 Education SRI Education works with government officials private foundations and commercial clients to provide research based analysis and evaluation of programs to identify trends understand outcomes and guide public policy and practice Focus areas include early learning educational technology social and emotional learning teacher quality assessments college and career readiness and large scale surveys 121 Global Partnerships It comprises three groups the Center for Science Technology and Economic Development the Center for Innovation Leadership the Energy Center and a team focused on R amp D programs for international clients 122 Information and Computing Sciences For its government and commercial clients this division conducts R amp D activities to understand the computational principles underlying intelligence in humans and machines and to create computer based systems that solve problems ICS is organized into four laboratories one of which is SRI s Artificial Intelligence Center The division focuses on artificial intelligence speech recognition natural language processing bioinformatics and computer security 123 Mission Solutions Mission Solutions performs technology and services in support U S government deployed systems The division focuses on information operations navigation and survivability systems and systems and signal technology 124 Products and Solutions This SRI division transitions R amp D technology into products for its government and commercial clients It maintains a portfolio that includes biometric identification systems real time video processing systems integrated video and sensor exploitation solutions and video test tools 125 Staff members and alumni editMain article List of SRI International people nbsp Curtis Carlson nbsp Douglas EngelbartSRI has had a chief executive of some form since its establishment Prior to the split with Stanford University the position was known as the director after the split it is known as the company s president and CEO SRI has had nine so far including William F Talbot 1946 1947 17 Jesse E Hobson 1947 1955 126 E Finley Carter 1956 1963 127 Charles Anderson 1968 1979 128 William F Miller 1979 1990 129 James J Tietjen 1990 1993 130 William P Sommers 1993 1998 131 Curtis Carlson 1998 2014 132 More recently the role was split into two The current CEO is David Parekh 133 and the president is Manish Kothari formerly president of SRI Ventures SRI also has had a board of directors since its inception which has served to both guide and provide opportunities for the organization The current board of directors includes Samuel Armacost Chairman of the Board Emeritus Mariann Byerwalter chairman William A Jeffrey Charles A Holloway vice chairman Vern Clark Robert L Joss Leslie F Kenne Henry Kressel David Liddle Philip J Quigley Wendell Wierenga and John J Young Jr 134 Its notable researchers include Elmer Robinson meteorologist co author of the 1968 SRI report to the American Petroleum Institute API on the risks of fossil fuel burning to the global climate 135 Many notable researchers were involved with the Augmentation Research Center These include Douglas Engelbart the developer of the modern GUI 136 William English the inventor of the mouse 137 Jeff Rulifson the primary developer of the NLS 138 Elizabeth J Feinler who ran the Network Information Center 139 and David Maynard who would help found Electronic Arts 140 The Artificial Intelligence Center has also produced a large number of notable alumni many of whom contributed to Shakey the robot 141 these include project manager Charles Rosen 142 as well as Nils Nilsson 143 Bertram Raphael 141 Richard O Duda 144 Peter E Hart 144 Richard Fikes 145 and Richard Waldinger 146 AI researcher Gary Hendrix went on to found Symantec 147 148 Former Yahoo President and CEO Marissa Mayer performed a research internship in the Center in the 1990s 149 The CALO project and its spin off Siri also produced notable names including C Raymond Perrault and Adam Cheyer 150 151 Several SRI projects produced notable researchers and engineers long before computing was mainstream Early employee Paul M Cook founded Raychem 152 William K MacCurdy developed the Hydra Cushion freight car for Southern Pacific in 1954 29 Hewitt Crane and Jerre Noe were instrumental in the development of Electronic Recording Machine Accounting 42 Harrison Price helped The Walt Disney Company design Disneyland 24 James C Bliss developed the Optacon 153 and Robert Weitbrecht invented the first telecommunications device for the deaf 154 155 Spin off companies edit nbsp Intuitive Surgical s robotic surgery system the da Vinci Surgical SystemMain article List of SRI International spin offs Working with investment and venture capital firms SRI and its former employees have launched more than 60 spin off ventures 156 in a wide range of fields including Siri acquired by Apple Tempo AI acquired by Salesforce com Redwood Robotics acquired by Google Desti acquired by HERE Grabit Kasisto Passio Artificial Muscle Inc acquired by Bayer MaterialScience Nuance Communications Intuitive Surgical Ravenswood Solutions and Orchid Cellmark 5 157 158 Some former SRI staff members have also established new companies In engineering and analysis for example notable companies formed by SRI alumni include Weitbrecht Communications 159 Exponent and Raychem 158 Companies in the area of legal policy and business analysis include Fair Isaac Corporation Global Business Network and Institute for the Future 158 Research in computing and computer science related areas led to the development of many companies including Symantec the Australian Artificial Intelligence Institute E Trade and Verbatim Corporation Wireless technologies spawned Firetide and venture capital firm enVia Partners 158 Health systems research inspired Telesensory Systems 158 160 See also edit nbsp San Francisco Bay Area portalReferences editNotes edit Tax Filings and Audits by Year ProPublica 9 May 2013 Retrieved 2023 02 01 a b c d e About Us SRI International Retrieved 2015 09 01 Products and Solutions Technologies for License SRI International Archived from the original on 2015 04 29 Retrieved 2013 07 01 Products and Solutions SRI International Archived from the original on 2015 04 29 Retrieved 2014 05 17 a b SRI Ventures SRI International Retrieved 2013 07 01 How To Create An Innovative Culture The Extraordinary Case Of SRI Forbes Retrieved 2022 01 29 SRI International Completes Integration of Sarnoff Corporation Press release SRI International 2011 01 01 Retrieved 2002 07 01 SRI International SRI International Retrieved 2012 07 01 a b About Us SRI International 2014 10 20 Retrieved 2015 02 05 Nielson p 1 1 Nielson p B 1 a b c Nielson p B 2 Johnston Louis Williamson Samuel H 2023 What Was the U S GDP Then MeasuringWorth Retrieved November 30 2023 United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series a b c Nielson p B 3 Nielson p B 4 Gibson SRI The Founding Years pp 111 112 a b Lowen Rebecca July August 1997 Exploiting a Wonderful Opportunity Stanford Magazine Stanford Alumni Association Retrieved 2012 09 23 a b c Gibson SRI The Founding Years pp 98 99 Gibson SRI The Founding Years p 108 Tide SRI International Archived from the original on 2006 11 30 Retrieved 2012 07 01 a b c Nielson pp 9 18 9 21 Gibson Weldon B 1986 SRI The Take Off Days Los Altos California Stanford Research Institute pp 48 55 149 168 181 ISBN 978 0 86576 103 2 a b Nielson pp 14 17 14 20 a b Disneyland Timeline of Innovations SRI International Retrieved 2013 07 01 Katz Leslie 2010 07 19 Star studded celebration of Disneyland s 55th year The San Francisco Examiner Retrieved 2013 07 01 Timeline of SRI International Innovations 1940s 1950s SRI International Archived from the original on 2006 11 29 Retrieved 2012 07 01 McLaughlin p 39 a b c McLaughlin p 40 a b Nielson pp 6 1 6 3 Railroad Hydra Cushion Timeline of Innovations SRI International Retrieved 2013 07 01 Nielson p 2 8 Nielson p 2 1 Timeline of Innovations Electronic Recording Machine Accounting SRI International Retrieved 2012 07 15 Magnetic Ink Character Recognition Line Law amp Legal Definition USLegal Retrieved 2011 11 12 Douglas C Engelbart Hall of Fellows Computer History Museum Archived from the original on 2012 07 02 Retrieved 2012 06 17 Douglas Engelbart Foresight Advisor Is Awarded National Medal of Technology Foresight Update Vol 43 Foresight Institute 2000 12 30 How the mouse got its name BBC News 2008 12 08 Retrieved 2011 11 12 DARPA pp 76 77 McLaughlin p 37 Milestones Liquid Crystal Display 1968 IEEE Global History Network IEEE Retrieved 2012 04 15 All Magnetic Logic Computer Timeline of Innovations SRI International Retrieved 2013 07 01 a b Markoff John 2008 06 21 Hewitt D Crane 81 Early Computer Engineer Is Dead The New York Times Retrieved 2012 04 01 Movie Shakey Stanford Research Institute 1969 In 1966 the Stanford Research Institute created the first mobile robot that could reason about its surroundings Shakey SRI International Archived from the original on 2013 05 04 Retrieved 2012 07 17 Sutton Chris 2004 09 14 Internet Began 35 Years Ago at UCLA with First Message Ever Sent Between Two Computers UCLA Retrieved 2011 11 12 DARPA pp 79 83 Lewis Mark G Garcia Luna Aceves J J 1987 10 19 Packet Switching Applique for Tactical VHF Radios Crisis Communications The Promise and Reality IEEE MILCOM 1987 2 0449 0455 doi 10 1109 MILCOM 1987 4795249 S2CID 44026046 Over the Horizon Radar SRI International Archived from the original on 2011 07 20 Retrieved 2012 05 06 Thomason Joseph F 2005 04 14 Development of Over the Horizon Radar in the United States United States Naval Research Laboratory Archived from the original on December 1 2012 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Telecommunications Tools for the Deaf Timeline of Innovations SRI International Retrieved 2013 07 01 Deafnet CNET 2010 10 26 Retrieved 2012 05 06 Ogg Erica 2007 11 08 Internet van helped drive evolution of the Web CNET Retrieved 2011 11 12 Timeline of innovations Internetworking The First Three Network Transmission SRI International Retrieved 2012 07 01 Elizabeth J Feinler SRI Alumni Hall of Fame 2000 Archived from the original on 2013 02 01 Retrieved 2012 11 18 Underground Newspapers on Microfilm Peninsula Observer Herb Caen Magazines and Newspapers Center San Francisco Public Library 2010 06 05 Retrieved 2011 04 18 McLaughlin p 38 Leslie Stuart W 1994 04 15 Chapter 9 The Days of Reckoning March 4 and April 3 The Cold War and American Science The Military Industrial Academic Complex at MIT and Stanford New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231079594 Targ R Puthoff H 1974 10 18 Information transmission under conditions of sensory shielding Nature 251 5476 602 7 Bibcode 1974Natur 251 602T doi 10 1038 251602a0 PMID 4423858 S2CID 4152651 Puthoff H Targ R March 1976 A perceptual channel for information transfer over kilometer distances Historical perspective and recent research Proceedings of the IEEE 64 3 329 354 doi 10 1109 proc 1976 10113 S2CID 12688261 May EC March 1996 The American Institutes for Research review of the Department of Defense s STAR GATE program A commentary Journal of Parapsychology commentary 60 3 23 Also published in The American Institutes for Research review of the Department of Defense s STAR GATE program A commentary Journal of Scientific Exploration 10 1 89 107 1996 Jayanti Vikram June 13 2013 Never mind the NSA Uri Geller is the real spy story The Guardian Retrieved June 13 2013 Scott C July 29 1982 No remote viewing Nature 298 5873 414 Bibcode 1982Natur 298 414S doi 10 1038 298414c0 S2CID 4233306 Marks D Scott C 1986 02 06 Remote viewing exposed Nature 319 6053 444 Bibcode 1986Natur 319 444M doi 10 1038 319444a0 PMID 3945330 S2CID 13642580 Waller Douglas 1995 12 11 The Vision Thing Time p 45 Archived from the original on February 9 2007 Retrieved 2013 09 20 About VALS The VALS Story Strategic Business Insights Retrieved 2012 04 15 Vals Sric Bi Retrieved 2011 11 12 Nielson pp 11 7 11 10 a b Lunt Teresa F Denning Dorothy E Schell Roger R Heckman Mark Shockley William R June 1990 The SeaView Security Model PDF IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering IEEE Computer Society 16 6 593 607 doi 10 1109 32 55088 Lamport Leslie 1986 LaTeX A Document Preparation System Reading Massachusetts Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 15790 1 Retrieved 2008 08 01 Ventures PacketHop SRI International Archived from the original on 2012 07 03 Retrieved 2013 06 13 SRI International of Menlo Park Wins Patent Battle Over Enterprise Network Intrusion Detection Technology Intellectual Property Today 2008 10 24 Archived from the original on 2014 02 01 Retrieved 2012 04 15 Saffiotti Alessandro Ruspini E Konolige Kurt G March 1993 A Fuzzy Controller For Flakey An Autonomous Mobile Robot SRI International Retrieved 2013 03 06 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CARMEL vs Flakey A Comparison of Two Robots University of Michigan and SRI International 1994 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 87 1641 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help 100 oldest com domains iWhois com Retrieved 2012 07 15 Myers Karen L PRS CL A Procedural Reasoning System SRI International Retrieved 2012 07 15 SRI Technology At Core of New U S Postal Service Letter Sorting System 1997 09 03 Archived from the original on 2011 04 20 Retrieved 2012 07 15 INCON United States Patent and Trademark Office Retrieved 2012 09 23 Deployable Force on Force Instrumented Range System SRI International Archived from the original on 2012 02 11 Retrieved 2012 04 15 Centibots The 100 Robots Project Artificial Intelligence Center Retrieved 2012 07 15 Centibots The 100 Robots Project University of Washington Computer Science amp Engineering Robotics and State Estimation Lab Archived from the original on 2013 02 01 Retrieved 2012 07 15 Ackerman Elise 2004 01 15 Centibot army drills for action for the military The Baltimore Sun Retrieved 2012 07 15 Delio Michelle 2003 08 04 LinuxWorld Opens Hunting Season Wired Retrieved 2012 07 15 BotHunter aims to find bots for free www securityfocus com About BotHunter www bothunter net DARPA p 99 a b Anderson Nate 2006 11 09 Defense Department funds massive speech recognition and translation program Ars Technica Retrieved 2012 07 01 Mieszkowski Katharine 2003 04 07 How do you say regime change in Arabic Salon p 2 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Piquepaille Roland 2006 06 04 IraqComm computer cracks language barriers ZDNet Retrieved 2012 04 15 SRI International Licenses Drug Formulation Process to Dura Pharmaceuticals SRI International 1997 07 01 Archived from the original on 2011 04 20 Retrieved 2012 07 15 US 3703176 Nielson pp 10 3 10 5 Nielson p 11 1 Pathway Tools Information Site SRI International Retrieved 2012 07 15 BioCyc SRI International Retrieved 2012 07 15 SRI International Makes First Observation of Atomic Oxygen Emission in the Night Airglow of Venus Press release SRI International 2001 01 18 Archived from the original on 2011 07 20 Retrieved 2012 05 06 SRI International Celebrates 50 Years of Molecular Physics Discoveries Press release SRI International 2006 08 06 Retrieved 2013 07 10 Slanger T G Cosby P C Huestis D L Bida T A 2001 01 19 Discovery of the Atomic Oxygen Green Line in the Venus Night Airglow Science 291 5503 463 465 Bibcode 2001Sci 291 463S doi 10 1126 science 291 5503 463 PMID 11161195 Retrieved 2012 05 06 Golf 20 20 Overview World Golf Foundation Archived from the original on 2012 05 24 Retrieved 2012 05 06 U S Golf Economy Measures 62 Billion Says New Report By SRI International for the World Golf Foundation s Golf 20 20 Initiative Press release SRI International 2002 11 14 Archived from the original on 2011 07 20 Retrieved 2012 05 06 SRI International Launches Spin Off Company AtomicTangerine The First Venture Consulting Firm to Target E business SRI International 2000 04 19 Archived from the original on 2011 07 20 Retrieved 2012 04 01 Lauerman John 2006 11 07 SRI Wins U S Contract to Develop Drugs for Bird Flu Bloomberg Retrieved 2012 04 15 SRI International Selects St Petersburg Florida for New Marine Technology R amp D Facility Press release SRI International 2006 11 30 Retrieved 2013 07 10 City Breaks Ground on SRI International s St Petersburg Facility Press release SRI International 2008 10 30 Retrieved 2012 07 01 SRI Opens New Research Facility at the Port of St Petersburg Florida Technology Journal 2010 01 11 Archived from the original on 2012 07 12 Retrieved 2012 05 06 Spyglass Technologies Receives Exclusive License to Commercialize SRI International s Underwater Mass Spectrometer Press release SRI International 2014 03 19 Retrieved 2014 03 24 Hay Timothy 2010 04 28 Apple Moves Deeper Into Voice Activated Search With Siri Buy Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2011 11 12 Apple s Siri voice assistant based on extensive research CNN 2011 10 04 Retrieved 2011 11 12 Siri Launches Virtual Personal Assistant for iPhone 3GS Press release SRI International 2010 02 05 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Lardinois Frederic 2008 10 13 Semantic Stealth Startup Siri Raises 8 5 Million Readwriteweb com Archived from the original on 2011 10 18 Retrieved 2011 10 05 Advanced Modular Incoherent Scatter Radar SRI International Retrieved 2012 07 15 SRI International Selected by the National Science Foundation to Manage Arecibo Observatory Press release SRI International 2011 06 02 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Sanders Robert April 13 2012 UC Berkeley passes management of Allen Telescope Array to SRI UC Berkeley NewsCenter Retrieved 29 December 2012 SRI International launches FASTcell cancer cell screening system Optics 2014 02 26 Retrieved 2014 03 24 NSF Awards Aim to Expand STEM Participation SIGNAL Magazine 2018 09 12 Retrieved 2018 09 14 Savitz Eric J April 24 2023 Xerox Gives Legendary PARC Lab to SRI International Barron s Archived from the original on April 25 2023 a b SRI Fact Sheet PDF SRI International March 2014 Retrieved 2014 05 17 a b Specialized Facilities SRI International Retrieved 2012 07 01 Our Organization SRI International June 2009 Retrieved 2015 08 17 Advanced Technology and Systems Division SRI International Retrieved 2015 08 17 SRI Biosciences SRI International Retrieved 2015 08 17 Potera Carol 2008 08 01 SRI Boasts Abilities in Early and Late Stage R amp D Genetic Engineering amp Biotechnology News Company Updates Vol 28 no 14 Mary Ann Liebert p 18 ISSN 1937 8661 Retrieved 2014 05 17 SRI Education SRI International Retrieved 2015 08 17 Global Partnerships SRI International Retrieved 2015 08 17 Information and Computing Sciences SRI International Retrieved 2015 08 17 Mission Solutions Division SRI International Retrieved 2015 08 17 Products and Solutions SRI International Retrieved 2015 08 17 Alumni Hall of Fame Previous Years J E Hobson SRI International Archived from the original on 2013 07 01 Retrieved 2012 07 01 E Finley Carter IEEE Global History Network IEEE Retrieved 2012 04 01 Charles Anderson San Francisco Chronicle 2009 04 21 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Faculty Profiles William F Miller Stanford Graduate School of Business Retrieved 2012 09 23 Dean Emeritus of Stevens Institute of Technology Dr James J Tietjen Joins SynQuest Board Press release The Free Library by Farlex 2000 11 30 Retrieved 2012 04 01 Dr William P Bill Sommers San Francisco Chronicle 2007 01 10 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Our People Curtis R Carlson SRI International Retrieved 2012 07 01 David Parekh SRI International 2 December 2021 Retrieved 2023 09 14 Our People Board of Directors SRI International Retrieved 2014 10 02 The Oil Industry Was Warned About Climate Change in 1968 Vice News 15 April 2016 Retrieved 16 March 2018 The Demo Science and Technology in the Making MouseSite Stanford University Retrieved 2012 04 01 Bill English Computer History Museum Archived from the original on 2012 01 04 Retrieved 2012 04 01 Alumni Hall of Fame 2006 Johns Frederick Jeff Rulifson SRI International Archived from the original on 2013 07 01 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Alumni Hall of Fame 2000 Elizabeth J Feinler SRI International 2000 Archived from the original on 2013 02 01 Retrieved 2012 07 01 David Maynard at MobyGames a b Nilsson Nils J 2010 The Quest for Artificial Intelligence A History of Ideas and Achievements PDF Stanford University Buchanan Wyatt 2002 12 20 Charles Rosen expert on robots co founder of winery San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 2012 07 01 AI s Hall of Fame PDF IEEE Intelligent Systems 26 4 5 15 2011 doi 10 1109 MIS 2011 64 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 12 16 Retrieved 2015 09 04 a b Alumni Hall of Fame 2008 Peter E Hart SRI International Retrieved 2012 07 01 Fikes Richard E April 1971 Monitored Execution of Robot Plans Produced by STRIPS PDF SRI International Retrieved 2012 04 01 Dr Richard J Waldinger Artificial Intelligence Center Retrieved 2012 04 01 Spicer Dag 2004 11 19 Oral History of Gary Hendrix PDF Computer History Museum Retrieved 2012 04 01 McLaughlin p 100 Marissa Mayer Biography Biography com Retrieved 2015 07 08 International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Honors SRI s Raymond Perrault with Donald E Walker Distinguished Service Award SRI International 2011 07 18 Retrieved 2012 07 01 Boran Marie 2011 11 16 iRobot The Irish Times Retrieved 2012 04 01 Bohning James J 2 April 1992 Paul M Cook Transcript of an Interview Conducted by James J Bohning at San Carlos California on 2 April 1992 PDF Philadelphia PA Chemical Heritage Foundation Bliss James C June 1966 Contributors IEEE Transactions on Human Factors in Electronics HFE 7 2 107 108 doi 10 1109 THFE 1966 232331 Robert H Weitbrecht Deaf Scientist Corner Texas Women s University Retrieved 2012 03 25 Hevesi Dennis 2009 08 22 James Marsters Deaf Inventor Dies at 85 The New York Times Retrieved 2012 03 25 SRI Ventures SRI International Retrieved 2015 07 08 Alphabetical List SRI International August 2013 Retrieved 2015 07 08 a b c d e Nielson p F1 F4 Lang Harry G 2000 A phone of our own the deaf insurrection against Ma Bell Washington D C Gallaudet University Press p 96 ISBN 978 1 56368 090 8 Weitbrecht Communications stanford SRI Ventures Biotech Medical SRI International Retrieved 2012 07 01 Works cited edit Nielson Donald 2006 A Heritage of Innovation SRI s First Half Century Menlo Park California SRI International ISBN 978 0 9745208 1 0 Gibson Weldon B 1980 SRI The Founding Years Los Altos California Stanford Research Institute ISBN 978 0 913232 80 4 McLaughlin John R Weimers Leigh A Winslow Wardell V 2008 Silicon Valley 110 Year Renaissance Palo Alto California Santa Clara Valley Historical Association ISBN 978 0 9649217 4 0 DARPA 50 Years of Bridging The Gap DARPA 2008 Archived from the original on 2011 05 06 Further reading editSRI history edit Carlson Curtis R Wilmot William W 2006 Innovation The Five Disciplines for Creating What Customers Want New York Crown Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 307 33669 9 Lento Thomas V 2006 Inventing the Future 60 Years of Innovation at Sarnoff Princeton New Jersey Sarnoff Corporation ISBN 978 0 9785463 0 4 Gibson Weldon B 1986 SRI The Take Off Days Los Altos California Stanford Research Institute ISBN 978 0 86576 103 2 Specific topics edit Crane Hewitt Kinderman Edwin Malhotra Ripudaman June 2010 A Cubic Mile of Oil Oxford New York Oxford University Press USA ISBN 978 0 19 532554 6 Markoff John 2005 What the Dormouse Said How the 60s Counterculture Shaped the Personal Computer Industry New York Viking Adult ISBN 978 0 670 03382 9 Hafner Katie 1996 Where Wizards Stay Up Late The Origins of the Internet with Matthew Lyon New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 83267 8 Bowden Mark 2011 WORM The First Digital World War about the Conficker computer worm New York Atlantic Monthly Press ISBN 978 0 8021 1983 4 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to SRI International SRI International website37 27 24 N 122 10 31 W 37 4566 N 122 1753 W 37 4566 122 1753 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SRI International amp oldid 1191893383, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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