Content deleted Content added
Alan S. Willsky.<ref>[https://lids.mit.edu/people/facultypi/alan-willsky ''Alan S. Willsky,'' Edwin Sibley Webster Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (retired) at M.I.T.]</ref><ref>[http://ssg.mit.edu/~willsky/ ''Alan S. Willsky, |
No edit summary |
||
(15 intermediate revisions by 10 users not shown) | |||
Line 1:
{{Short description|Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MA, USA}}
The '''MIT Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems''' ('''LIDS''') is an interdisciplinary research laboratory of [[MIT]], working on research in the areas of [[communications system|communications]], [[control theory|control]], and [[digital signal processing|signal processing]] combining faculty from the [[MIT School of Engineering|School of Engineering]] (including the [[
The laboratory was founded in 1940 as the '''Servomechanisms Laboratory''' ('''servo lab'''). At the time it was a center for research into automated control systems, including those used for automatic [[gun laying]] systems. This expertise led to work in the emerging [[radar]] field where the lab was instrumental in introducing automatic radar tracking systems used in the [[SCR-584 radar]]. In the post-war era the lab focused more on electronic systems as opposed to mechanical servos, including the use of [[computer]]s, and this led to it becoming the '''Electronic Systems Laboratory''' ('''ESL''') in 1959. This, in turn, led to the lab working on systems to collect information from widespread sensors and combine in, and presenting that information for command decisions. This led to the current name being adopted in 1978.
== History ==
The
Known as ''LIDS'', the
== See also ==
Line 10 ⟶ 13:
== References ==
{{
== External links ==
* [
{{MITtemplate}}
{{Authority control}}
[[Category:Massachusetts Institute of Technology|Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems]]
|