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'''George A. Miller''' ([[3rd February]] [[1920]] in [[Charleston (West Virginia)|Charleston]] in [[West Virginia]]) is a famous professor of [[psychology]] at [[Princeton University]], he served as Professor of Psychology at [[Rockerfeller University]], [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] and at [[Harvard University]], where he was Chairman of the Department of Psychology. He was a Fulbright Research Fellow at [[Oxford University]] and served at the President of the [[Americal Psychological Association]]. His most famous work was ''[[The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two|The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on our Capacity for Processing Information]]'', which was published in [[1956]] in ''The Psychological Review.''
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'''George A. Miller''' (3rd February [[1920]] in Charleston, West Virginia is professor of [[psychology]] at [[Princeton University]], he served as Professor of Psychology at [[Rockerfeller University]], [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] and at [[Harvard University]], where he was Chairman of the Department of Psychology. He was a Fulbright Research Fellow at [[Oxford University]] and served at the President of the [[American Psychological Association]]. His most famous work was ''[[The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two|The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on our Capacity for Processing Information]]'', which was published in [[1956]] in ''The Psychological Review.''
   
In 1960, Miller founded the [[Center for Cognitive Studies]] at Harvard with Jerome Bruner (a cognitivist developmentalist). In the same year he published 'Plans and the Structure of Behaviour' (with Eugene Galanter and [[Karl Pribram]]), which outlined their conception of [[Cognitive psychology|Cognitive Psychology]].
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In 1960, Miller founded the [[Center for Cognitive Studies]] at Harvard with [[Jerome Bruner]] (a cognitivist developmentalist). In the same year he published 'Plans and the Structure of Behaviour' (with Eugene Galanter and [[Karl Pribram]]), which outlined their conception of [[Cognitive psychology|Cognitive Psychology]].
   
 
In the [[linguistics]] community, Miller is well-known for overseeing the development of [[WordNet]], a semantic network for the [[English language]]. Development began in 1985 and the project has received about $3 million of funding, mainly from government agencies interested in [[machine translation]].
 
In the [[linguistics]] community, Miller is well-known for overseeing the development of [[WordNet]], a semantic network for the [[English language]]. Development began in 1985 and the project has received about $3 million of funding, mainly from government agencies interested in [[machine translation]].
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==See also==
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==Publications==
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===Books===
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===Book Chapters===
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===Papers===
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==External links==
 
==External links==
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[[Category:American psychologists|Miller, George A]]
 
[[Category:American psychologists|Miller, George A]]
 
[[Category:Human-computer interaction notables|Miller, George A.]]
 
[[Category:Human-computer interaction notables|Miller, George A.]]
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[[Category:National Medal of Science recipients|Miller, George A.]]
 
   
 
[[de:George A. Miller]]
 
[[de:George A. Miller]]

Revision as of 08:39, 19 September 2006

George A. Miller (3rd February 1920 in Charleston, West Virginia is professor of psychology at Princeton University, he served as Professor of Psychology at Rockerfeller University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and at Harvard University, where he was Chairman of the Department of Psychology. He was a Fulbright Research Fellow at Oxford University and served at the President of the American Psychological Association. His most famous work was The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on our Capacity for Processing Information, which was published in 1956 in The Psychological Review.

In 1960, Miller founded the Center for Cognitive Studies at Harvard with Jerome Bruner (a cognitivist developmentalist). In the same year he published 'Plans and the Structure of Behaviour' (with Eugene Galanter and Karl Pribram), which outlined their conception of Cognitive Psychology.

In the linguistics community, Miller is well-known for overseeing the development of WordNet, a semantic network for the English language. Development began in 1985 and the project has received about $3 million of funding, mainly from government agencies interested in machine translation.

See also

Publications

Books

Book Chapters

Papers

External links


de:George A. Miller


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