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  1. The Harvard Computers were a team of women working as skilled workers to process astronomical data at the Harvard College Observatory in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. The team was directed by Edward Charles Pickering (1877 to 1919) and, following his death in 1919, by Annie Jump Cannon .

  2. Nov 10, 2016 · At the Harvard College Observatory, between the late 19 th century and early 20 th century, several dozen women were "computers" who helped lay out some of the fundamental assumptions of...

  3. Sep 18, 2013 · At the beginning of the 20th century, a group of women known as the Harvard Observatory computers helped revolutionize the science of astronomy

  4. Apr 15, 2015 · Leavitt was one of a group of about 80 women, known as “the Harvard Computers,” who worked at the Harvard Observatory at the turn of the century. The Computers were hired by the Observatory’s director, Edward Charles Pickering, to help catalog and analyze thousands of early photographs of the night sky.

  5. Computer scientists at Harvard pursue work in a wide range of areas including theoretical computer science, artificial intelligence, economics and computer science, privacy and security, data-management systems, intelligent interfaces, operating systems, computer graphics, computational linguistics, robotics, networks, architectures, program ...

  6. Sep 3, 2008 · From the 1700s to the mid 1950s, most 'computers' were human. Best known were the 'Harvard computers', a group of women working from the 1880s until the 1940s, at the Harvard College...

  7. Mar 5, 2021 · More than a century ago, women called “human computers” changed our understanding of the universe. Now volunteers are making discoveries in their old notebooks.