Department Awards
Professor Milos Ercegovac has received the 2009 Lockheed Martin Excellence in Teaching Award. This award is based on the quality of classroom teaching, contributions to curriculum development, high personal and professional standards, and high scores on student teaching evaluations.
Professor Mario Gerla, and to Kyushu Institute of Technology professors Dirceu Cavendish, M. Tsuru and Y. Oie, and graduate student K. Kumazoe. "CapStart: An Adaptive TCP Slow Start for High Speed Networks" was awarded Best Paper at Internet 2009 in Cannes, France, in August 2009.
Professor Majid Sarrafzadeh, students Myung-kyung Suh, Kyujoong Lee, and Alfred Heu, and postdoc Ani Nahapetian have received a Best Paper award for "Bayesian Networks-Based Interval Training Guidance System for Cancer Rehabilitation." This paper will be presented at the International Conference on Mobile Computing, Applications, and Services, October 26-29, 2009, in San Diego CA.
UCLA and UIUC authors A. Papakonstantinou, K. Gururaj, J.A. Stratton, D. Chen, J. Cong, and W.W. Hwu have received a Best Paper Award for their joint paper, "FCUDA: Enabling Efficient Compilation of CUDA Kernels onto FPGAs." This was presented at the 7th IEEE Symposium on Application Specific
Processors in July 2009.
You can read more about this at: http://cadlab.cs.ucla.edu/~cong/papers/FCUDA_SASP09_CR.pdf
Professor Adnan Darwiche and graduate student Knot Pipatsrisawat have received a Best Student Paper award for "On the Power of Clause-Learning SAT Solvers with Restarts." Their paper will be presented at the 15th International Conference on Principles and Practice of Constraint Programming, September 2009, Lisbon, Portugal.
2009 Outstanding Ph.D and Master's Awards
Sung Hee Lee: Outstanding Ph.D. student (advisor Demetri Terzopoulos)
Albert Liu: Outstanding master's student (advisor Jason Cong)
2009 Outstanding Graduate Student Research Awards from Industry
Vipul Goyal (advisor Rafail Ostrovsky): Google
Sung Hee Lee (advisor Demetri Terzopoulos): Northrop Grumman
Dan Marino (advisor Todd Millstein): Semantec
Ricardo Oliveira (advisor Lixia Zhang): Cisco
Chancellor's Professor Demetri Terzopoulos is the recipient of a 2009 Guggenheim Fellowship -- awarded to individuals who have shown "stellar achievement and exceptional promise for continued accomplishment." This fellowship will support Demetri's continuing work in realistic human simulation -- an area in which he has made important advances during the past decade.
You can read more about this at: http://www.engineer.ucla.edu/news/2009/guggenheim_terzopolous.htm
Professor Eleazar Eskin received the Sloan Research Fellowship for 2009 for his work in the field of molecular biology. This prestigious fellowship is awarded to exceptional young researchers conducting research at the frontiers of physics, chemistry, computational and evolutionary molecular biology, computer science, economics, mathematics and neuroscience.
You can read more about this at: http://newsroom.ucla.edu/portal/ucla/ucla-scientists
Professor Lixia Zhang received the IEEE Internet Award for 2009, which is presented for exceptional contributions to the advancement of Internet technology for network architecture, mobility and/or end-use applications. Lixia's quotation reads: “For contributions toward an understanding of the complex interactions between Internet components and the development of the Internet architecture.”
You can read more about this at http://www.ieee.org/portal/pages/about/awards/sums/internet.html
Leonard
Kleinrock has been awarded the 2008 National Medal of
Science Award for “fundamental contributions to the
mathematical theory of modern data networks, for the functional
specification of packet switching which is the foundation
of the Internet Technology, for mentoring generations of
students, and for leading the commercialization of technologies
that have transformed the world.”
This is the nation’s
highest scientific honor and Professor Kleinrock will be presented
with the medal at a White House ceremony in September 2008.
He is the second faculty member from the School of Engineering,
and the tenth from UCLA to receive this distinction.
Kleinrock
interview
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My Work My Life Talk
Professor Majid
Sarrafzadeh and students Foad Dabiri, Alireza Vahdatpour,
Hyduke Noshadi and Hagop Hagopian have received a best-paper
award for their paper, "Ubiquitous
Personal Assistive System for Neuropathy". The paper
was presented at the 2nd ACM International Workshop on Systems
and Networking Support for Healthcare and Assisted Living
Environments (HealthNet 2008).
Professor Jason Cong has just been named an ACM Fellow for his "contributions to electronic design automation" and Adjunct Professor Alan Kay has been named an ACM Fellow for his "fundamental
contributions to personal computing and object-oriented programming."
Both awards are for 2008.
More details on the ACM news release can be found at: http://www.acm.org/press-room/news-releases/fellows-2008/
Professor Boris Kogan and coauthor Richard Samade received a Best Paper Award for their paper "Defibrillation Failure and Tachycardia-Induced Early Afterdepolarizations: A Simulation Study." This paper was presented at the International Conference on Computational Biology held in October 2008 and was selected for the Best Paper Award by the World Congress on Engineering and Computer Science.
Professor Deborah Estrin has received a Doctorate Honoris Causa from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne. This honor was conferred on Deborah during the Institute's commencement day ceremony on 4 October 2008.
In November 2008, the IEEE Board of Directors voted to elevate Professor Alan Yuille to IEEE
Fellow. His citation will read "for contributions to computer and biological vision, medical image processing and computational theories of
cognition." Alan currently holds joint appointments with the Computer Science Department and the Statistics and Psychology departments.
Professor Lixia Zhang has been
awarded the IEEE Internet Award for 2009. These awards are given annually for exceptional contributions to the advancement of Internet technology.
Lixia's award will read: "For contributions toward an understanding of the complex interactions between Internet components and the development
of the Internet architecture."
Professor Song-Chun Zhu is the recipient of the 2008 J. K. Aggarwal Prize for "fundamental and
pioneering contributions to a unified foundation for visual pattern conceptualization, modeling, learning, and inference with applications in computer
vision and pattern recognition." He will receive his prize at the International Conference on Pattern Recognition in December 2008.
Professor Rafail Ostrovsky, with coauthors Steve Lu and industrial collaborabor, Daniel Manchala (Xerox),
received a best-paper award for "Visual Cryptography on Graphs" at the 14th Annual International Computing and Combinatorics
Conference (COCOON'2008) held in Dalian, China.
David Smallberg is the recipient of the 2008 Lockheed Martin Excellence in Teaching Award. Over the last five years, computer science faculty members
have received more teaching awards than any other single department within the Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science.
Graduate student, Ka Cheung (Richard) Sia (advisor Professor John Cho), is the winner of the first-place graduate student award in this year's UCSD data mining competition (held March 25th to June 15th). This competition offers individuals a chance to test their
data mining skills on a real-world data set. The competition, held annually, is open to all students, post-docs, and "interested parties." This
year, over 100 teams participated in the competition.
Foad
Dabiri (advisor Majid Sarrafzadeh) has been selected
to receive the 2008 Edward K. Rice Outstanding Doctoral
Student Award. This award honors the achievements of
a distinguished doctoral student in the UCLA Henry Samueli
School of Engineering and Applied Science. Recipients
are selected on the basis of their academic excellence,
research contributions and service to the school, university
or community.
Professor Todd
Millstein, with coauthors Nupur Kothari and Ramesh
Govindan (both USC), received a best paper award for ³Deriving
State Machines from TinyOS Programs Using Symbolic Execution² at
the 2008 International Conference on Information Processing
in Sensor Networks (IP track), St. Louis, MO.
On May 17, 2008, Professor Judea
Pearl received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters
degree from Chapman University, and also served as the
keynote speaker at Chapman's undergraduate commencement
ceremony.
Professor Eleazar
Eskin has
been selected as a 2008 Okawa Foundation Research Grant
recipient. Awards are based on the merits of an individual's
research efforts in the fields of information and telecommunications.
An award ceremony and reception will be held on October
8th at The Ritz-Carlton in San Francisco.
Rafael
Laufer, CS Department PhD student (advisor Leonard
Kleinrock), is one of four students nationwide to receive
the Marconi Society's 2008 Young Scholars Award. Rafael
was selected for his outstanding research on Internet security.
Recipients of the Young Scholars Award receive financial
stipends and are invited to attend the annual Marconi award
dinner held this year at the Royal Society in London.
Vinton Cerf, alumnus of the Computer
Science Department, has been awarded the 2008 Japan Prize,
along with colleague Robert Kahn, for "creation of
network architecture and communication protocol for the
Internet." The Japan Prize is awarded by the Science
and Technology Foundation of Japan and recognizes scientists
whose original and outstanding achievements in science
and technology have advanced the frontiers of knowledge
and been of great
service to mankind. Cerf and Kahn created the TCP/IP protocol
used in today's Internet that allows computers on different
networks to communicate with each other.
Professor Todd
Millstein is
the recipient of the 2008 IBM Faculty Award. IBM Faculty
Awards are a competitive worldwide program intended to
foster collaboration between researchers at leading universities
worldwide and those in IBM research, development and services
organizations; and to promote courseware and curriculum
innovation to stimulate growth in disciplines and geographies
that are strategic to IBM.
Professor Judea
Pearl will
bepresented in April with the 2008 Benjamin Franklin
Medal in Computer & Cognitive Science by the Franklin
Institute, one of the oldest premier centers of science
education and development in the country. Judea is being
honored for creating the first general algorithms for
computing and reasoning with uncertain evidence, allowing
computers to uncover associations and causal connections
hidden within millions of observations. The
Franklin Institute
Professor Majid
Sarrafzadeh and co-authors of "The
SmartCane System: An Assistive Device for Geriatrics" received
a best-paper award from the 3rd International Conference
on Body Area Networks (BodyNets 2008), Tempe AZ, March
2008. This was a joint submission by EE, CS, VA Hospital
and School of Medicine. Authors: W.H. Wu, L.K. Au, B. Jordan,
T. Stathopoulos, M.A. Batalin, W.J. Kaiser, A. Vahdatpour,
M. Sarrafzadeh, M. Fang and J. Chodosh.
A joint CS/EE paper authored
by Frank Chang, Jason Cong, Adam Kaplan, Mishali Naik,
Glenn Reinman, Eran Socher, and Rocco Tam has received
the best paper award from the 14th International Symposium
on High Performance
Computer Architecture (HPCA) held February 16-20, 2008.
This year's symposium received 161 papers, accepted 31,
and gave only one best paper award.
This paper, "CMP Network-on-Chip Overlaid With Multi-Band RF-Interconnect," explores the use of multi-band RF interconnect with signal propagation at the speed of light to provide shortcuts in a many-core network-on-chip (NOC) mesh topology.
Professor Amit
Sahai's paper "Predicate Encryption Supporting
Disjunctions, Polynomial Equations, and Inner Products" (co-authored
with Brent Waters and Jonathan Katz) has been selected
as one of the top four papers at Eurocrypt 2008. It
will be included in a special issue of the Journal
of Cryptology dedicated to the best papers from this
conference (to be held in Istanbul, Turkey, April 13-17).
Eurocrypt is one of the two top conferences in cryptology,
and accepts papers related to cryptography, cryptanalysis,
and computer security (the acceptance ratio for papers
submitted to Eurocrypt 2008).
In recognition
of his achievements, 3rd-year graduate student Vipul
Goyal has been awarded the highly prestigious Microsoft
Graduate Fellowship. In addition to the financial support
offered by the fellowship, Vipul will have the opportunity
to participate in a 12-week paid research internship
for each of the next two years. The fellowship award
ceremony will be held at Microsoft Research on March
3, 2008.
Alumnus
and adjunct faculty member Leon
Alkalai was recently
named a member of the International Academy of Astronautics.
Founded in 1960 by Theodore von Karman, the Academy's
goals include fostering the development of astronautics
for peaceful purposes, encouraging cooperation in the
advancement of aerospace science, and recognizing individuals
who have distinguished themselves in a related branch
of science or technology. Dr. Alkalai has been with NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory for 18 years and is the manager
of JPL's Robotic Lunar Exploration Office.