. "Appendix A: Biographies of Committee Members and Staff." Beyond Productivity: Information, Technology, Innovation, and Creativity. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 2003.
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Beyond Productivity: Information Technology, Innovation, and Creativity
and IEEE. In 1998 Marjory was a visiting scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Laboratory for Computer Science. At MIT she developed and taught a course on public policy for computer science graduate students and pursued personal research interests. Marjory did her undergraduate work at Brown University and her graduate work (as an NSF Graduate Fellow) at Harvard University.
MARGARET MARSH HUYNH, senior project assistant, joined the Computer Science and Telecommunications Board in January 1999 and has worked on several projects. Currently, she is working on the projects on Internet navigation and the Domain Name System and the future of supercomputing. Ms. Huynh also assists with CSTB Board meetings and has worked on such recent projects as “Exploring Information Technology Issues for the Behavioral and Social Sciences,” as well as those leading to the reports IT Roadmap to a Geospatial Future (2003), Building a Workforce for the Information Economy (2001), and The Digital Dilemma: Intellectual Property in the Information Age (2000). Ms. Huynh assists on other projects as needed. Prior to coming to the National Academies, Ms. Huynh worked as a meeting assistant at Management for Meetings for 4 months and as a meeting assistant at the American Society for Civil Engineers from September 1996 to April 1998. Ms. Huynh has a B.A. (1990) in liberal studies, with minors in sociology and psychology, from Salisbury State University, Salisbury, Maryland.