List of Institute Professors at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology

The title of Institute professor is an honor bestowed by the Faculty and Administration of MIT on a faculty colleague who has demonstrated exceptional distinction by a combination of leadership, accomplishment, and service in the scholarly, educational, and general intellectual life of the Institute or wider academic community.[1]
 MIT Policies and Procedures: Special Professorial Appointments, Institute Professor

Institute Professor is the highest title that can be awarded to a faculty member at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a research university located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. It is analogous to the titles of distinguished professor, university professor, or regents professor used at other universities in recognition of a professor's extraordinary research achievements and dedication to the school. At MIT, Institute Professors are granted a unique level of freedom and flexibility to pursue their research and teaching interests without regular departmental or school responsibilities; they report only to the provost.[1] Usually no more than twelve professors hold this title at any one time.[1] The position was created by President James R. Killian in 1951 and John C. Slater was the first to hold the position.[2]

Institute Professors are initially nominated by leaders representing either a department or school. The chair of the faculty then consults with the Academic Council and jointly appoints with the president an ad-hoc committee from various departments and non-MIT members to evaluate the qualifications and make a documented recommendation to the president. The final determination is made based upon recommendations from professionals in the nominee's field. The case is then reviewed again by the Academic Council and approved by the Executive Committee of the MIT Corporation.[1]

List of Institute Professors

Current

Name Department Elected Notability Reference
Emilio Bizzi Brain and Cognitive Sciences 2002 Motor control; President of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2006–2009) [3]
Sallie W. Chisholm Civil and Environmental Engineering 2015 Discovery and biology of the Prochlorococcus marine cyanobacteria [4]
Ann Graybiel Brain and Cognitive Sciences 2008 Basal Ganglia; National Medal of Science (2001) [5][6]
John Harbison Music and Theater Arts 1995 Composer; Pulitzer Prize (1987) for Flight into Egypt; MacArthur Fellow (1989) [7]
Robert S. Langer Chemical Engineering & Biological Engineering 2005 Drug delivery and tissue engineering; youngest person to be elected to three American academies; Lemelson-MIT Prize (1998), Draper Prize (2002), National Medal of Science (2007), Millennium Technology Prize (2008) [8]
Barbara Liskov Computer Science 2008 Turing Award (2008), John von Neumann Medal (2004), contributions to data abstraction and programming languages [9]
John D.C. Little Management Little's law; marketing; e-commerce [10]
Thomas Magnanti Mechanical Engineering 1997 Operations research; Dean of Engineering (1999–2007) [11]
Joel Moses Computer Science 1999 Algebraic manipulation algorithms; MACSYMA; Provost of MIT (1995–1998); Dean of Engineering (1991–1995) [12]
Ron Rivest Computer Science 2015 Co-inventor of the RSA (cryptosystem) algorithm; founder of Verisign, RSA Security [4]
Phillip Sharp Biology 1999 RNA interference and splicing; Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1993) [13]
Marcus Thompson Music and Theater Arts 2015 Violist; Artistic Director of Boston Chamber Music Society [4]
Daniel I.C. Wang Chemical Engineering 1995 Biochemical process engineering [7]
Sheila Widnall Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering 1998 Secretary of the Air Force (1993–1997); first MIT alumna appointed to MIT engineering faculty; first woman to chair the MIT faculty [14]
Frank Wilczek Physics 2000 Asymptotic freedom, Sakurai Prize (1986), Dirac medal (1986), Nobel Prize in Physics (2004) [15]

Emeritus

Name Department Elected Notability Reference
Noam Chomsky Linguistics 1976 Generative grammar; Kyoto Prize (1988); political activist; one of the most widely cited scholars alive[16][17] [18]
John M. Deutch Chemistry 1990 Deputy Secretary of Defense (1994–1995); Director of Central Intelligence (1995–1996); Provost of MIT (1985–1990) [19][20]
Peter A. Diamond Economics 1997 Social Security reform; Nobel Prize in Economics (2010) [11]
Mildred S. Dresselhaus Physics & Electrical Engineering 1985 Carbon nanotubes; National Medal of Science (1990) [21]
Jerome I. Friedman Physics 1991 Quantum chromodynamics; Nobel Prize in Physics (1990) [22]
Morris Halle Linguistics 1981 Phonology; The Sound Pattern of English [23]
Mario Molina Earth, Atmosphere, and Planetary Sciences 1997 Stratospheric ozone chemistry; Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1995) [11]
Isadore Singer Mathematics 1987 Atiyah–Singer index theorem; Abel Prize (2004) [24]
Robert M. Solow Economics 1973 National Medal of Science (1999); John Bates Clark Medal (1961); Nobel Prize in Economics (1987) [25]

Deceased

Name Department Elected Notability Reference
Manson Benedict Nuclear Engineering 1969 National Medal of Science (1975) [26]
Norbert Wiener Department of Mathematics 1959 National Medal of Science (1964) [27]
Gordon S. Brown Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 1973 Automatic feedback-control systems; computer numerical control; Dean of Engineering (1959–1968) [28]
Martin Julian Buerger Mineralogy 1956 Crystallography [29]
Morris Cohen Material Science and Engineering 1974 Metallurgy of steel [30]
Charles S. Draper Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 1966 Inertial guidance; gyro gunsight; founder of the Instrumentation Laboratory [31]
Harold Eugene "Doc" Edgerton Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 1966 High-speed photography; Co-founder of EG&G; National Medal of Science (1973) [32]
Herman Feshbach Physics 1983 Nuclear reaction theory; National Medal of Science (1986) [33]
Edwin R. Gilliland Chemical Engineering 1971 Fractional distillation columns and fluidized catalytic cracking; President's Science Advisory Committee (1961–1965) [34]
Hermann Anton Haus Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 1986 Optical communications; National Medal of Science (1995) [35]
Arthur von Hippel Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 1962 Dielectric materials [36]
Arthur Thomas Ippen Civil Engineering 1970 Hydraulic engineering and water resources [37]
Roman O. Jakobson Linguistics Slavic studies and linguistics; Russian formalism [38]
György Kepes Architecture 1970 Founded the Center for Advanced Visual Studies; Bauhaus contributor; Hungarian Medal of Honor and Middle Cross (1996) [39]
Norman Levinson Mathematics 1971 Non-linear differential equations; mathematical analysis; analytic number theory; testified at 1953 House Un-American Activities Committee [40][41]
Francis E. Low Physics Condensed matter physics; Provost of MIT (1980-1985) [42]
Franco Modigliani Economics & Management 1970 Nobel Prize in Economics (1985) [43]
Philip Morrison Physics 1973 Theoretical astrophysics [44]
Walle J. H. Nauta Brain and Cognitive Sciences 1973 Nauta Silver Impregnation Method used to trace degenerating nerve fibers [45]
Walter A. Rosenblith Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 1975 Psychoacoustics; elected to all three National Academies; Provost of MIT (1971–1980) [46]
Bruno Rossi Physics 1966 X-ray astronomy and discovery of cosmic rays; National Medal of Science (1983); Wolf Prize (1987) [47]
Paul Samuelson Economics 1966 John Bates Clark Medal (1947); Nobel Prize in Economics (1970); National Medal of Science (1996) [48]
Francis O. Schmitt Biology 1955 Biological electron microscopy [49]
Nevin S. Scrimshaw Nutrition and Food Science 1980 Eliminating nutritional deficiency; World Food Prize (1991) [50]
Ascher H. Shapiro Mechanical Engineering 1975 Fluid mechanics and biomedical engineering [51]
John C. Slater Physics 1951 Quantum theory and electromagnetic theory of microwaves; advisor to William Shockley and Richard Feynman [52]
Cyril S. Smith Materials Science & Humanities Metallurgy and crystallography; metallography of archaeological artifacts [53]
Carl R. Soderberg Mechanical Engineering 1959 Steam turbine electric generators; Dean of Engineering (1954–1959); consultant on the J-57 turbojet [54]
Charles H. Townes Physics 1961 Quantum Electronics and Maser; Nobel Prize in Physics (1964); National Medal of Science (1982) [55]
John S. Waugh Chemistry Computational studies of spin systems [56]
Victor Weisskopf Physics 1965 National Medal of Science (1980); Wolf Prize (1981); co-founder of the Union of Concerned Scientists [40]
Jerome Wiesner Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 1980 Chairman of the President's Science Advisory Committee (1961–1964); Dean of Science (1964–1966); Provost of MIT (1966–1971); President of MIT (1971–1980) [57]
Jerrold R. Zacharias Nuclear Science and Engineering 1966 Atomic beams and clocks; educational reform; microwave radar [58]
Chia-Chiao Lin Mathematics 1966 Fluid mechanics [40][59]

Former

Name MIT department Current institution Elected Notability Reference
David Baltimore Biology Caltech 1995 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1975) [7]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "MIT Policies and Procedures: Special Professorial Appointments, Institute Professor". Retrieved 2007-03-24.
  2. "Slater Takes New Post as Roving Physics Professor" (PDF). The Tech. September 18, 1951. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
  3. Elizabeth A. Thomson (June 5, 2002). "Bizzi is named an Institute Professor". MIT News Office. Retrieved 2007-03-23.
  4. 1 2 3 "Chisholm, Rivest, and Thompson appointed as new Institute Professors". Retrieved 2015-06-29.
  5. "Ann Graybiel named institute professor". MIT News Office. November 2008. Retrieved 2008-03-04.
  6. "MIT's Ann Graybiel awarded national medal of science". Retrieved 2008-03-04.
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  15. (PDF) http://web.mit.edu/physics/people/faculty/docs/wilczek_cv.pdf. Missing or empty |title= (help)
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  17. "According to a recent survey by the Institute for Scientific Information, only Marx, Lenin, Shakespeare, Aristotle, the Bible, Plato, and Freud are cited more often in academic journals than Chomsky, who edges out Hegel and Cicero." Samuel Hughes, The Pennsylvania Gazette, July/August, 2001
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  29. Azaroff, L. V. J. Appl. Cryst. (1986) 19, 205-207.
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  31. "Dr. Draper & His Lab". Draper Labs. Archived from the original on October 17, 2006. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
  32. "MIT Loses a Colorful, Beloved Professor". January 10, 1990. Archived from the original on 2007-05-14. Retrieved 2007-04-04.
  33. "Renowned nuclear physicist Feshbach, Institute Professor emeritus, dies at 83". MIT News Office. January 10, 2001. Retrieved 2007-03-23.
  34. P.L. Thibaut Brian. "Memorial Tributes: National Academy of Engineering, Volume 1 (1979)". National Academies Press. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
  35. "Institute Professor Hermann Haus, quantum optics pioneer, dies at 77". MIT News Office. June 4, 2003. Retrieved 2007-03-23.
  36. "Institute Prof. von Hippel dies at 105; was leader in materials research". MIT News Office. January 14, 2004. Retrieved 2007-03-23.
  37. Hunter Rouse. "Memorial Tributes: National Academy of Engineering, Volume 1 (1979)". National Academies Press. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
  38. "Obituary: Roman Jackobson (1896-1982)". Journal of American Folklore. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
  39. "Gyorgy Kepes, founder of CAVS, dies at 95". MIT News Office. January 16, 2002. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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  45. "Institute Professor Walle J.H. Nauta dies". MIT News Office. March 30, 1994. Retrieved 2007-03-24.
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  50. "Scrimshaw to Receive Food Prize". August 28, 1991. Archived from the original on September 11, 2004. Retrieved 2007-03-26.
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  55. "Nobelist and former Institute Professor to speak at MIT". MIT News Office. April 11, 2001. Retrieved 2007-03-24.
  56. "MIT Chemistry faculty webpage". Retrieved 2007-03-26.
  57. "President emeritus Jerome Wiesner is dead at 79". October 26, 2004. Retrieved 2007-04-04.
  58. Norman F. Ramsey. "Jerrold R. Zacharias (1905-1896)". Retrieved 2007-04-22.
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External links

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