Groves was a pioneer and leader in the application of computing and related technology to the study and teaching of the Hebrew Bible and language, a field in which he is acknowledged as one of the earliest visionaries and most influential scholars. In 1986, Groves founded the Westminster Hebrew Institute — a center for the study of Biblical Hebrew linguistics through computing, which in December 2006 (shortly before his death) was renamed the J. Alan Groves Center for Advanced Biblical Research. the Westminster-Claremont-Michigan Electronic Text of Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia, The Groves-Wheeler Morphology is incorporated into a majority of commercially available Bible software products that provide study of original language translation, including
Accordance, BART, BibleWindows, BibleWorks, Gramcord,
Logos, and WordSearch. ==Publications==