Greif's mother was an accountant,[2] and a native of New York City.[3] Greif has at least one sibling, a sister.[4] She attended Hunter College High School before earning her undergraduate and graduate degrees from MIT. In 1975, Greif became the first woman to earn a Ph.D. in computer science from MIT;[2][5] in her dissertation of that year, she published the first operational actor model.[6]
Career
She was a professor of computer science at the University of Washington before returning to MIT as a professor of electrical engineering and computer science (1977–87). In 1984, Greif and Paul Cashman coined the term "Computer Supported Cooperative Work" and the initials, CSCW, at an interdisciplinary workshop in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[7][8] Preferring research over teaching,[2] she left academia in 1987 to join Lotus, where she directed its Product Design Group,[9] and created the Lotus Research group in 1992.[10] After Lotus was acquired by IBM, she became an IBM Fellow and served as director of collaborative user experience in the company's Thomas J. Watson Research Center.[5][11] Greif retired from IBM in 2013.[2]
Greif is featured in the Notable Women in Computing cards.[15]
Personal life
Greif is married to Albert R. Meyer, the Hitachi America Professor of Computer Science at MIT. Greif, who is Jewish,[16] has a son and daughter, as well as two step-children, and lives in Newton Centre, Massachusetts.[17]
Selected works
1975, Semantics of communicating parallel processes
1980, Programs for distributed computing : the calendar application
1982, Cooperative office work, teleconferencing and calendar management : a collection of papers
1983, Software for the 'roles' people play
1988, Computer-supported cooperative work : a book of readings