Electro-Acoustic Laboratory, Harvard University
1940 - 1947
Founded in 1940 as part of an initiative to reduce noise problems experienced by bomber pilots during the War. The laboratory was headed by the then 26 year-old Leo Beranek at Harvard. During the War, the laboratory did pioneering research in noise reduction and communications, famously erecting a large anechoic chamber on Harvard's North Yard. The Electro-Acoustic Laboratory collaborated extensively with another Harvard institution, the Psycho-Acoustic Laboratory headed by S.S. Stevens.
In 1947, Leo Beranek was appointed as professor of Communications Engineering at MIT.
For a detailed history of the Electro-Acoustic Laboratory, see: Brandon Gary Shackelford, When Noise Signals Change: The Electro-Acoustic and Psycho-Acoustic Laboratories from 1940 to 1945 . Senior Thesis, History and Science Concentration, Harvard University, 1997.