Card received a
B.A. in
physics from
Oberlin College in 1966. Card completed his Ph.D. in psychology in 1978 under the supervision of
Allen Newell at
Carnegie Mellon University. His doctoral work brought together experimental psychology, information-processing theory, and the emerging study of human interaction with computers. In his dissertation,
Studies in the Psychology of Computer Text Editing Systems, Card treated computer text editing as a rigorous object of scientific analysis, modeling user behavior in terms of goals, operators, methods, and selection rules. This work helped establish the conceptual foundations of modern human-computer interaction and foreshadowed the influential research Card would later carry out at Xerox PARC later in his career. After his Ph.D., he started working as an adjunct faculty member at
Stanford University in the late 1960s. Since 1974 he had been working at
PARC and was the Area Manager of the User Interface Research group. He retired from PARC in 2010 but has been a consulting professor in Stanford University's Computer Science department. Card received several awards. In 2000 he was awarded the CHI Lifetime Achievement Award from the
Association for Computing Machinery's SIGCHI, and became Fellow of the
Association for Computing Machinery. In 2001 he was elected to the
CHI Academy. In 2007, he was elected a member of the
National Academy of Engineering, and was awarded The
Franklin Institute's
Bower Award and Prize for Achievement in Science. On May 26, 2008, Card was made an Honorary Doctor of Science by Oberlin College. == Work ==