The Center's founding was a strategic intervention. Bruner and Miller recognized that the cognitive revolution required institutional infrastructure — a place where scholars from different disciplines could work together without being constrained by departmental politics or disciplinary orthodoxies. The Center provided that space.
The Center's research agenda reflected Bruner and Miller's complementary interests. Miller's work on memory, attention, and information processing; Bruner's work on perception, concept formation, and educational theory. Visiting scholars added linguistics (Chomsky), developmental psychology (Piaget), neuropsychology (Luria), and early computational modeling.
The Center's institutional significance exceeded its empirical output. It demonstrated that interdisciplinary cognitive research could be conducted with rigor and at scale. It trained a generation of researchers who went on to found related institutes. And it established the norms — theoretical ambition, empirical discipline, openness across disciplinary boundaries — that shaped cognitive science as a field.
The Center dissolved in 1972 when Bruner moved to Oxford and internal tensions between the computational and cultural-psychological wings of its research became harder to sustain institutionally. By then, the cognitive revolution had succeeded; its work could continue in the departments and centers it had helped establish. But the specific interdisciplinary intimacy of the Harvard Center — what Bruner called 'working at the same desk as people thinking completely different thoughts' — was never quite recreated.
Founded in 1960 at Harvard with support from the Carnegie Corporation and subsequent funding from NIMH, NSF, and private foundations. Housed initially in an old wooden building at 61 Kirkland Street, the Center operated until 1972. Its annual reports, proceedings, and fellows' publications constitute one of the most important archives of mid-twentieth-century cognitive science.
Interdisciplinary founding. Psychology, linguistics, computer science, philosophy, and neuroscience combined in a single institutional home.
The Miller–Bruner partnership. Two of the most productive cognitive scientists of the century co-directed the Center through its most influential years.
A roll-call of visitors. Chomsky, Piaget, Luria, Kahneman, and dozens more passed through — establishing personal and intellectual networks that shaped cognitive science for decades.
Training ground. A generation of researchers trained at the Center went on to found cognitive science institutes elsewhere.
Template for subsequent institutes. The Center's model shaped cognitive science centers at MIT, CMU, UCSD, and internationally.