Then MIT hired her to study the sociology of sciences of the mind. "I began to hear students talking about their minds as machines, based on the early personal computers they had."
They'd use phrases like "debugging" or "don't talk to me until I clear my buffer".
"I'd never heard any of this stuff before." So Turkle began to study the way that artificial intelligence was taking hold in everyday life, at a time when these interactions with machines were pretty raw. She was at the right place at the right time.
The place was MIT, home to some of the pioneers of artificial intelligence and social robotics, and the birthplace of perhaps the most sophisticated, and endearing, social robots. Turkle tested these anthropomorphic robots on children, "computer virgins".
In one study she observed how children would bond with the robots, which were programmed to respond with human-like emotions, in a way they wouldn't with other toys.
"This becomes a tremendously significant relationship for the child," she says, "and then it will get broken or disappoint, and the child will go ballistic. My research group went berserk at how much damage we felt we'd done."
Turkle was "smitten with the subject and stayed with it for 30 years". In the early days she was labelled a "cyber diva".
"People thought I was very pro-computer. I was on the cover of Wired magazine." Then things began to change. In the early 80s, "we met this technology and became smitten like young lovers," she says. "But today our attachment is unhealthy."
In her latest book, Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other, Turkle says we have reached a point she calls the "robotic moment" - where we delegate important human relationships, in particular interactions at "the most vulnerable moments in life" - childhood and old age - to robots.
"We are so worried about Asperger's, so worried about the way we communicate with faces. To me, as somebody who likes technology, this is just playing with fire."
Turkle frequently receives calls from journalists seeking comments on the latest story about robots in nursing homes, teacherbot programmes or nannybots to look after children. She sees married couples who prefer to have their fights online.
"My studies of funerals are hilarious," she says. "Everybody's texting. When I ask them about it, they say, 'Yeah, I do it during the boring bits'. So that's the question: what does it mean as a society that we are there for the boring bits?"
She is particularly concerned about the effect on children. "I am a single mum. I raised my daughter, and she was very listened to."
Today our phones are always on, and always on us. Parents are too busy texting to watch their kids, she cautions. There's been a spike in playground accidents.
"These kids are extremely lonely. We are giving everybody the impression that we aren't really there for them. It's toxic." This is what she means by "alone together" - that our ability to be in the world is compromised by "all that other stuff we want to do with technology".
For many these are inconvenient truths, and lately Turkle has come to be seen as a naysayer, even a technophobe. She is no longer the cover girl for Wired. "This time they didn't even review my book."
In fact, the initial reviews of Alone Together, Turkle says, can be summarised as "everybody likes Facebook, can't she just get with the programme?" This, she adds, is unfair to the 15 years of research behind it. "I mean, give me the credit. I didn't do a think piece. I was reporting. People tell me they wish [iPhone companion] Siri were their best friend. I was stunned.
"You can't make this stuff up."
Turkle is optimistic that people will begin to want to reclaim their privacy, to turn back to their relationships with real people. Yet she concedes that the lure of technology is such that it's a tough challenge. "Online you become the self you want to be. But the downside? We lose the 'raw, human part' of being with each other." She points to our early morning meeting, for example. She's tired, and we could have done the interview over Skype. "Online I am perfect," she says.
"But what's the worst that can happen here? You write a story that says, 'Bedraggled from her walk in the rain, she shows up begging for a latte? So what? You pretty much see me as I am. And I'm willing to say that's a good thing."
Turkle on science
What is the most exciting field of science at the moment?
Neurobiology. I think that we are going to begin to learn about the limitations as well as what we can know about behaviour and the brain. Right now people think we will be able look into the brain and see what's happening. I think we will get a sense of what we can know, and I think science will also come to be more modest.
Do you believe in God?
I believe strongly in something.
What book about science should everybody read?
Uncle Tungsten by Oliver Sacks.
What words of advice would you give a teenager who wants a career in science?
Hold on to your passion - you'll need it.
Why do so few scientists enter politics?
I think few people of education enter politics because it seems like a contact blood sport.
What's your own relationship with technology?
Email has been an oppression. Waking up in the morning and finding 800 emails, I feel as if I've done something wrong. I think that email stands between me and the kind of pace of life that I'd like to live at.
- Observer