Brown University. Institute for Research in Information and Scholarship

Variant names

Hide Profile

Brown University established the Institute for Research in Information and Scholarship (IRIS), to explore new uses of computing technology in research, teaching and learning. To address the needs of today's "idea workers," IRIS worked to develop a rich set of experimental tools that provide people with new ways to create, retrieve and organize information.

The Institute's most important accomplishment was the creation of Intermedia, an advanced hypertext system. The work of the project was funded by a grant from Annenberg/CPB. The project's main purpose was to design a set of computer-based tools that would enable instructors to create software for teaching and research, and then have students use these tools as a supplement to their other coursework. The project was tested and assessed in three undergraduate courses at Brown University: Biology 106, English 32, and Music 40.

IRIS was founded by Andries van Dam, William S. Shipp, and Norman Meyrowitz in August 1983 and closed its doors in June 1994. Shipp, the founding director, retired in 1990, and between 1990 and 1992 Meyrowitz and Martin J. Michel served as co-directors. From 1992 to its close, Paul Kahn directed the Institute.

From the guide to the Institute for Research in Information and Scholarship records, circa 1985-1992, (John Hay Library Special Collections)

Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Annenberg/CPB. corporateBody
associatedWith Brown University. corporateBody
associatedWith Getty Art History Information Program person
associatedWith Getty Art History Information Program. corporateBody
associatedWith International Business Machines Corporation. corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Subject
Occupation
Activity

Corporate Body

Active 1986

Active 1990

Information

Permalink: http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6tx8nrb

Ark ID: w6tx8nrb

SNAC ID: 8265140