ACM Names Fellows for Computing Advances that Are Driving Innovation
ACM Names Fellows for Computing Advances that Are Driving Innovation2011 Fellows Represent World's Leading Universities and Corporations
acm Contact: Virginia Gold
New York, NY, December 8, 2011 -- ACM has recognized 46 of its members for their contributions to computing that have provided fundamental knowledge to the computing field and generated multiple technology advances in industry, commerce, healthcare, entertainment, and education. The 2011 ACM Fellows, from the world’s leading universities, corporations, and research labs, are helping to drive the innovations that will sustain competitiveness in the digital age. “These women and men, who are some of the leading thinkers and practitioners in computer science and engineering, are changing how the world lives and works,” said ACM President Alain Chesnais. “They have mastered the tools of computing and computer science to address the many significant challenges that confront populations across the globe. These international luminaries are responsible for solutions that are transforming our society for the better—in healthcare, communications, cybersecurity, robotics, commerce, industry, and entertainment.” Within the corporate sector, the 2011 ACM Fellows named from AT&T Labs–Research were cited for contributions for data management and algorithm design and analysis. Google Inc. Fellows were recognized for advances in full-system simulation and information retrieval. Microsoft Research’s ACM Fellows were honored for achievements in software analysis, computer graphics, reasoning and decision-making, network control, and distributed computing. Other companies with 2011 ACM Fellows are Cavium, Inc., and Forte Design Systems. Their respective contributions include high performance microarchitecture and hardware simulation. Among the universities with 2011 ACM Fellows was the University of California, with representatives from the Santa Barbara, Irvine, Davis, and San Diego campuses. These Fellows were recognized for achievements in data management systems; graph algorithms and computational geometry; visualization and computer animation; computational science; high performance processors; and data center scalability and management. ACM Fellows at Carnegie Mellon University included those honored for contributions to parallel computing, and human computer interaction. Harvard University’s ACM Fellows were cited for security and privacy policy leadership, and data management and computing systems. The University of Washington’s ACM Fellows were acknowledged for achievements in architecture and design of reconfigurable systems, and computer network design. At the University of Michigan, ACM Fellows were tapped for contributions to human-computer interaction and planning systems design. Other North American universities with 2011 ACM Fellows include University of Toronto; Indiana University; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; the University of Southern California; the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Stony Brook University; Case Western Reserve University; the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; and Tufts University. ACM Fellows from these institutions were cited for achievements in human-computer interaction; software applications for high performance computing; distributed systems and e-commerce; computer networking; geometric modeling and computer graphics; geometric computing and approximation algorithms; database management systems; machine learning and natural language processing; and query processing in data management systems. Among universities outside North America, the 2011 ACM Fellows hailed from INRIA Saclay in France; Aarhus University in Denmark; the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel; Tokyo Institute of Technology in Japan; and National University of Singapore. Fellows from these universities were recognized respectively for achievements in theory and practice of databases; temporal and spatio-temporal data management; simulated annealing and combinatorial optimization; high performance computer design; and distributed data management. Fellows with multiple affiliations included those from NVIDIA Corp. and the University of Texas at Austin; the National Science Foundation and the University of California, San Diego; Harvard University and Oracle Corporation; the University of California, San Diego and Google Inc.; École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in Switzerland, Renyi Institute in Hungary, and the Courant Institute at New York University; and L.J. Gonzer Associates and IBM Research(consultant). They were cited respectively for contributions to software verification by model checking; computer architectures and technology modeling; distributed systems; data management and computing systems; data center scalability and management and computational geometry; and optimizing compilers. ACM will formally recognize the 2011 Fellows at its annual Awards Banquet on June 16, 2012 in San Francisco, CA. Additional information about the ACM 2011 Fellows, the awards event, as well as previous ACM Fellows and award winners is available at www.acm.org/awards.
2011 ACM Fellows
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