Murray turoff

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Murray Turoff
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of California - Berkeley, Brandeis University
OccupationDistinguished Professor Emeritus
Known forComputer-mediated communication
AwardsEFF Pioneer Award
Scientific career
FieldsInformation and Computer Science, Management
InstitutionsNew Jersey Institute of Technology, Rutgers-Newark

Murray Turoff is a retired Distinguished professor at New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT). He is considered by many to be the father of Computer-mediated communication.

Education

Murray received his B.A. degree in Mathematics and Physics from the University of California at Berkeley in 1958. He received his PhD in Physics from Brandeis University in 1965.

Career

Murray has served as Chairperson of the Information Systems Department, acting Chairperson of the Computer and Information Science Department as well as Director of Computerized Conferencing and Communications Center during his tenure at NJIT.

He was also simultaneously a member of the faculty at Rutgers Graduate School of Management between 1982 and 2005.

He currently holds the title Distinguished Professor Emeritus in the Information Systems Department at New Jersey Institute of Technology.

Major Projects

Murray was the designer of the Emergency Management Information System And Reference Index (EMISARI), which was the first group communication-oriented crisis management system and which was used for the 1971 Wage Price Freeze and assorted federal crisis events until the mid-1980s.

He has designed and implemented the EIES (Electronic Information Exchange System) as part of a 25 year research program in to the design of structured Computer Mediated Communications Systems (CMC) to conduct field trials and evaluations of alternative applications of human communications via computers.

Publications

He has authored or co-authored 8 books including The Network Nations (with his wife Starr Roxanne Hiltz) which won the TSM Award of the Association of American Publishers for the Best Technical Publication in 1978 which went on to become the defining document and standard reference for the field of computer mediated communication.

Awards

Murray was awarded the EFF Pioneer Award in 1994 for "significant and influential contributions to computer-based communications and to the empowerment of individuals in using computers."

References