Computing Reviews
Today's Issue Hot Topics Search Browse Recommended My Account Log In
Browse by topic Browse by titles Authors Reviewers Browse by issue Browse Help
Search
 
Guthrie, Gregory
Maharishi University of Management
Fairfield, Iowa
 
   Featured Reviewer
   Reviewer Selected
Follow this Reviewer
 
 
 

Gregory Guthrie is an educator, researcher, and developer in the areas of computer science languages and software systems, and consciousness-based education, and is a consultant in applying and teaching these areas to leading technical companies.

Guthrie is the dean and former chairman of the highly successful MS Computer Science Master’s Degree program, whose co-op MS program track has been one of the most successful and largest programs at the university.

He received his BS and MS degrees in engineering science from Purdue University, and his PhD is also from Purdue. At Purdue, he was active in areas including computer analysis and graphics systems for stochastic data analysis, which was the primary area of his dissertation research. After leaving Purdue, he was a member of the technical staff at Bell Telephone Laboratories, where he was a principal system architect for new processor development projects. In 1983, he came to Maharishi University of Management (MUM) to join the computer science department, and helped found the graduate program that he now directs. He is now the dean of the School of Computer Science and Mathematics, and professor of computer science. He is also the former chairman of the department, graduate dean, and director of academic computing for the university.

He is active in teaching, research, and consulting in the areas of computer programming languages and system architectures. He has served as a referee and reviewer for several technical conferences and journals, and has written and published several technical articles. He currently serves on the University Academic Planning Council, the principal academic administration group for the university.

He is president of his own consulting firm, and has done research and system development jobs for firms including AT&T, Bell Labs, IBM, and other major computer and technology development companies. His research and teaching interests currently include programming languages and paradigms, software architecture, patterns and frameworks, and educational approaches in computing and engineering education.

The main focus of his current language and systems work is in the area of object-oriented systems and functional programming and languages; language semantics and design, with an emphasis on Java and object-oriented languages and systems, dynamic languages, and functional programming using Haskell; and the area of design as it relates to and connects these different paradigms. His current research also involves connecting the descriptions of the fundamental concepts and models of computing to other traditional systems of knowledge and human models of thinking, as a way to help students understand the more general basis of the ideas taught in the discipline.

He has lectured and taught around the world at leading universities on current topics in these areas, including recently in Nepal, China, the US, and India.

Guthrie is a member of the ACM and the IEEE.

 
 
Options:
Date Reviewed  
 
1
- 2 of 2 reviews

   
   Java closures and lambda
Fischer R., Apress, Berkeley, CA, 2015. 220 pp.  Type: Book (978-1-430259-98-5), Reviews: (2 of 2)

Java 8 is well recognized as the most significant change to Java since its beginning. More than the typical features, upgrades, and updates, it adds a new set of semantic features to the language, enabling some additional functional pr...

Jul 10 2015  
   Spreadsheet implementation technology: basics and extensions
Sestoft P., The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2014. 336 pp.  Type: Book (978-0-262526-64-7), Reviews: (1 of 2)

Spreadsheets have been a main staple of modern computing since the early 1960s, although they have not gone through much significant change or evolution in the last decades. A particularly interesting aspect of this is that spreadsheet...

Feb 5 2015  
 
 
   
Send Your Comments
Contact Us
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.   Copyright 1999-2024 ThinkLoud®
Terms of Use
| Privacy Policy