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V6

CSE Honors V6

CSE HONORS

Christine

Christine Alvarado was named a 2018 ACM Distinguished Member for her “outstanding contributions to the field.” In April, she also received a Faculty Excellence Award from the chancellor. The award honored her for “innovative research, extraordinary teaching and making a difference in the community.”

ravi-recent

Ravi Ramamoorthi was inducted into the ACM SIGGRAPH Academy for his “groundbreaking  theoretical work in mathematical representations of visual appearance and for translating these into computational methods with wide practical impact.”

Alex Snoeren

Alex Snoeren was named a 2018 ACM Fellow for his “innovative approaches to measuring, managing and detecting network traffic.” In addition, a paper by Snoeren and colleagues, Inferring Persistent Interdomain Congestion, was selected as best paper at the SGICOMM 2018 conference in Budapest.

Vineet-Bafna-2

Vineet Bafna was honored as an International Society of Computational Biology (ISCB) Fellow, which “honor members that have distinguished themselves through outstanding contributions to the fields of computational biology and bioinformatics.”

Mihir

Mihir Bellare received the Levchin Prize  at the Real World Crypto conference “for outstanding contributions to the design and analysis of real-world cryptosystems, including the development of the random oracle model, modes of operation, HMAC and models for key exchange.” Bellare was also named the S. Gill Williamson Endowed Chair in Computer Science. He is the first person to hold the chair.

Alin Deutsch, Victor Vianu and colleagues were honored with the International Conference on Database Theory’s Test of Time award for their 2009 paper: Automatic verification of data-centric business processes .

Jadi

Hadi Esmaeilzadeh was named Halicioglu Endowed Chair in Computer Architecture. He is the first person to hold the chair. He also received the Young Computer Architect Award from IEEE Technical Committee on Computer Architecture.

Sicun

Sicun Gao was honored as an Air Force Office of Scientific Research AFOSR Young Investigator for his work in automated reasoning for high-assurance hybrid system control.

Rajesh Gupta and Pavel Pevzner were named AAAS Fellows

Pevzner was also honored with the ACM Paris Kanellakis Theory and Practice Award for his pioneering contributions to the theory, design and implementation of genome assembly algorithms. 

Gupta also received the 2019 IEEE Computer Society W. Wallace McDowell Award for his “seminal contributions in design and implementation of microelectronic systems-on-chip and cyberphysical systems.”

Stefan Savage

Stefan Savage received the IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Security and Privacy Distinguished Service Award for outstanding contributions as the inaugural chair of the IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy Test of Time Award Committee.

Zhuowen

Zhuowen Tu was named an IEEE Fellow  for his “contributions to computer vision, medical imaging and deep learning.”

micciancio200

Daniele Micciancio was named an IACR Fellow in 2019 for his work on lattice-based cryptography, the complexity of lattice problems and his service to IACR.

Joseph Politz

Joseph Politz was named CSE Teacher of the Year  for 2017-2018 by the Jacobs School of Engineering. 

Dean Tullsen
Chair/Professor, Computer Science and Engineering

Dean Tullsen, CSE PhD student Mohammadkazem Taram and alumnus and assistant professor at the University of Virginia Ashish Venkat, had their paper Mobilizing the Micro-Ops: Exploiting Context Sensitive Decoding for Security and Energy Efficiency selected as an IEEE Micro Top Pick in Computer Architecture, which recognizes the top papers in the field published each year. Of the 123 papers nominated for this distinction, only 12 were selected.

Geoff

Geoff Voelker and alumnus Lonnie Liu won the USENIX Test of Time Award at NSDI “for their work on Sora: High Performance Software Radio using General Purpose Multicore Processors,” the first software-based Wi-Fi radio platform on PC.

Manmohan Chandraker and Julian McAuley both received NSF’s Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award.

arun kumar

Arun Kumar was named a fellow in the UCSD Hellman Fellowship Program, which provides financial support and encouragement to young faculty in the core disciplines who show capacity for great distinction in their research and creative activities.

Ranjit

Ranjit Jhala received the Robin Milner Young Researcher Award given by ACM SIGPLAN to recognize outstanding contributions by young investigators in the area of programming languages.

kahng

Andrew B. Kahng, a professor of computer science and electrical engineering, was awarded the 2019 Ho-Am Prize for Engineering, the highest award for engineering in Korea. Kahng was recognized for his significant contributions to advance the semiconductor industry by developing design automation software to create complex integrated-circuit systems in semiconductors.

The Ho-Am Foundation noted that Kahng “developed algorithms for integrated circuit (IC) physical design automation to maximize chip performance through optimal layout and connections of complex components on semiconductor chips. He shifted the paradigm of IC physical design by first proposing DFM (design for manufacturability) from the initial stage of IC design. He advanced the development of the semiconductor industry as his innovative IC physical design technologies have become the standard for major semiconductor research institutes and manufacturers around the world.”

copyright 2020 – Computer Science & Engineering – University of California San Diego

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V6

Alumni Shoutouts V6

Alumni Shoutouts

Do you have an achievement you’d like to share with your CSE community? Let us know! cse-communications@eng.ucsd.edu 

copyright 2020 – Computer Science & Engineering – University of California San Diego

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V6

Our Alumni Community V6

Our Alumni Community

Do you have an achievement you’d like to share with your CSE community? Let us know! cse-communications@eng.ucsd.edu 

taitano

Intuit software engineer Kylie Taitano ’14 was named “Rising Star” at Athena’s 21st Annual Pinnacle Awards. At the event, held May 7 in San Diego, Taitano was recognized for her inspirational work increasing the pipeline of women in tech.

Taitano’s efforts include raising funds and granting student scholarships, organizing large events and coding workshops focused on K-12 girls, partnering with the Girl Scouts on technology and mentoring students for technology entrepreneurship. She is a co-founder of Code With Her, which offers real-world coding experience and mentorship through the Girl Scouts. Read More

mallick

CSE alum Satya Mallick (PhD ’06) has been honored as one of the 50 Most Popular #AI Influencers in North America. He is number six on the list, produced by AiThority.com.

Mallick is currently the interim CEO and lead author on OpenCV.org. He also founded Big Vision, a San Diego-based company that specializes in computer vision, machine learning, deep learning and artificial intelligence products and services. Read More

taner

CSE alumnus Taner Halıcıoğlu ‘96 was recognized as one of eight Outstanding Alumni during the 2019 Alumni Awards Celebration Weekend.

Honorees are selected by a committee of volunteers, including Alumni Board of Directors members, for their distinguished work and outstanding achievements. Read More

CSE alumni Leo Porter and Cynthia Lee were honored for a Top Ten Symposium Paper of All Time for SIGCSE’s 50th Anniversary. A Multi-Institutional Study of Peer Instruction in Introductory Computing  was first presented in 2016. Read More

claffy

KC Claffy, director of the Center for Applied Data Analysis (CAIDA) at UC San Diego’s Supercomputer Center, was inducted into the Internet Hall of Fame for her pioneering internet measurement and analysis work.

Claffy, also a CSE adjunct professor and alumna, was among 11 inductees from six countries who were honored at a special ceremony in San José, Costa Rica. Read More

oriol

In a machine-versus-man match up in the video game StarCraft II, an artificial “agent” was able to learn how to reach grandmaster level with all three alien races in the game. Machines have also learned how to correctly identify objects and activities in an image and how to translate human speech.

That’s due in large part to the work of Oriol Vinyals, who is pushing the boundaries of how deep machine learning can go. Read More

bianca-zadrozny

Since earning her PhD in 2003, Bianca Zadrozny has pursued her computer science career, in both industry and academia, in two countries. Her path has led her to IBM Research in Brazil, where she oversees natural resources analytics research.

Her group’s mission is to conduct research projects in data-driven and physically driven analytics, aiming to develop novel technologies that can help in smarter natural resources discovery and exploration. Read More

Trailblazer

In Ozgur Sinanoglu’s Design for Excellence lab at New York University’s Abu Dhabi campus, a major development in cybersecurity has emerged.

The Electrical and Computer Engineering professor and his team of eight researchers have made news over the last couple of years with their strides to create a chip that can stand up to a variety of threats and attempts to violate its security. A first-of-its kind chip that would be unhackable. Read More

copyright 2020 – Computer Science & Engineering – University of California San Diego

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V6

CSE Research V6

CSE RESEARCH

smartfin-1

After buying her own surfboard on Craigslist, Jasmine Simmons, a fourth-year UC San Diego CSE undergraduate, taught herself to surf. Now, she is using her board to ride waves and gather important ocean data through the Smartfin Project.    

A collaboration between the Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) and the Surfrider Foundation, Smartfin analyzes data from near-coastal ocean regions, where people surf and play. Read More

spoilers

Did social media spoil Avengers Endgame for you? A team of researchers from UC San Diego has developed an AI-based system that can flag spoilers in online reviews to make sure that doesn’t happen again. 

Some websites allow people to manually flag their posts with spoiler ahead tags, but that doesn’t always happen. To remedy the problem, UC San Diego researchers developed SpoilerNet, an artificial intelligence tool powered by neural networks that automatically detect spoilers. Read More

UCSD-JacobsSchool-20190802-BT_skimmers-00149-e-8MP

Computer scientists at UC San Diego and the University of Illinois have developed an app that allows state and federal inspectors to detect devices that criminals install in gas pumps to steal consumer credit and debit card data. The devices, known as skimmers, use Bluetooth to transmit the data they steal.

The app, called Bluetana, detects the skimmers’ Bluetooth signatures, allowing inspectors to find the devices without opening the gas. Read More

CSE Boasts a MOOC Milestone_0

In addition to practical experience, students receive rapid feedback on their work. Programming challenges are instantly graded, using test cases to catch common mistakes.

The MOOC also encourages students to adopt an integrated development environment (IDE) used by many professional programmers. This encourages them to move beyond academic programming, which may not be ideal in the corporate world. Instead, they are exposed to visual debugging, unit tests and other professional programming features rarely covered in university classes. Read More

copyright 2020 – Computer Science & Engineering – University of California San Diego

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V6

CSE Changes and Rememberance V6

CSE news and CHANGES

At the CSE Celebration of Diversity, attendees were invited to participate in a Red Chair Event, which is part of the National Center for Women in Technology’s SitWithMe campaign. Dozens of people sat down in a red chair to say a few words about diversity, equity, and inclusion. Through this symbolic gesture, they took a stand for diversity, equity and inclusion in Computer Science & Engineering and beyond. Read More

 

summer-with-cse

Computer science is often taught as an isolated discipline and not integrated into other science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) courses, reducing the number of students who learn to code.

Bootstrap seeks to change that. Based at Brown University, the nationwide program gives teachers better tools to integrate computing into their classrooms. CSE has been part of the program for nearly a decade and in early August, CSE assistant teaching professor Joseph Politz led a group of San Diego Unified School District math and science teachers through a three-day seminar.  Read More

copyright 2020 – Computer Science & Engineering – University of California San Diego