PROGRAM COMMITTEE
CONFERENCE CHAIR
Dr. Pamela Williams, Sandia National Laboratories
TECHNICAL PROGRAM
Dr. Mark Friedman, Central Connecticut State University, Chair
TECHNICAL PAPERS
Dr. Patricia J. Teller, University of Texas-El Paso, Co-Chair
Dr. Elaine Weyuker, AT&T Labs - Research, Co-Chair
Dr. Vladik Kreinovich, University of Texas-El Paso
DOCTORAL CONSORTIUM
Dr. Nina Berry, Sandia National Laboratories, Chair
Dr. Tony Drummond, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Dr. Elaine Raybourn, Sandia National Laboratories
Dr. Gilbert Rochon, Purdue University
POSTERS
Dr. Monica Martinez-Canales, Sandia
National Laboratories, Co-Chair
Dr. Diane Jamrog, Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, Co-Chair
PANELS
Dr. M. Brian Blake, Georgetown University, Co-Chair
Dr. Andrew B. Williams, Spelman College, Co-Chair
BIRDS-OF-A-FEATHER (BOF)
Dr. Demetrios Kazakos, University of Idaho, Co-Chair
Dr. Maria Cristina Villalobos, University of Texas-Pan American, Co-Chair,
WORKSHOPS
Dr. Lorie Liebrock, New Mexico Tech, Co-Chair
Dr. Robert E. Megginson, University of Michigan, Co-Chair
FUNDRAISING COMMITTEE
Dr. Radha Nandkumar, National Center for Supercomputing Applications, Co-Chair
Dr. Valerie Taylor, Texas A&M University, Co-Chair
Dr. Debra Richardson, University of California, Irvine
SCHOLARSHIPS COMMITTEE
Stephenie A. McLean, Texas Advanced Computing Center, Chair
Alson Been, Bethune-Cookman College
Jan Bingen, Little Priest Tribal College
Dr. Juan Gilbert, Auburn University
Leslie Todd Romero, Turtle Mountain Community College
STUDENT VOLUNTEERS
Carla Romero, Computing Research Association, Chair
PUBLIC RELATIONS
Jon Bashor, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Chair
Karen Green, National Center for Supercomputing Applications
Jennifer Kapp, Purdue University
Jermaine Williams, Our Lady of the Lake University
REGISTRATION
Tony Baylis, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,
Chair
WEB
Eric Brittain, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
CONTRACTOR(S)
Carlton Bruett, Graphic Design
Conference Technology Enhancements, Inc., Local Arrangements
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Pamela J. Williams
Sandia National Laboratories
Conference Chair
Pamela Williams is a senior member of the technical staff in the Computational Sciences and Mathematics Research Department at Sandia National Laboratories. Her research interests include optimization, machine learning, and mathematical software design.
Dr. Williams earned a B.S. in mathematics from the University of Kentucky, and a M.A. and Ph.D. in Computational Applied Mathematics from Rice University. Williams' honors and awards include an Otis A. Singletary Scholarship, National Society of Black Engineers Fellow, AT&T Cooperative Research Fellowship, and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Education Outreach Award. She is a member of ACM, NAM, and SIAM. In addition, Dr. Williams was recently elected to a three-year term on the University of Kentucky Alumni Association's Board of Directors.
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Mark Friedman
Central Connecticut State University
Chair, Technical Program
Mark A. Friedman is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Central Connecticut State
University, where he consults, conducts research and teaches courses in networks and distributed
processing, software engineering, and computer game technologies.
Prior to arriving at CCSU, Mark served as a consultant to and instructed computer scientists and engineers
in object-oriented and distributed technologies, as the President and Founder of The Richard Roman Institute,
and as the Chief Technology Officer of Mokonet, Inc. in New York City.
Mark spent six years at Trinity College in Hartford, CT as an Assistant Professor of Computer Science,
after earning his Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Wisconsin-Madison specializing in computer architecture.
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Patricia Teller
University of Texas-El Paso
Co-Chair, Technical Papers
Teller received her B.A. (magna cum laude), M.S., and Ph.D. (1991)
from New York University (NYU). Currently, as an Associate Professor
at UTEP, she works with seven Ph.D. students, six Master's students,
and two undergraduate students on research projects with support from
the Department of Defense, Department of Energy (DoE), IBM
Corporation, and National Science Foundation (NSF). Her current
research focuses on the dynamic adaptation of applications, operating
systems, and computer architectures for performance, performance
evaluation methodologies, and parallel and distributed computing. She
has published five journal and over forty conference articles. Teller
has served as a program committee member numerous times and has been
financial, tutorial, student volunteer, and poster chair for major
conferences, and as a reviewer for the NSF and DoE. Currently
(2003-2006) she is a member of the steering committee for the
Supercomputing Conference series. Finally, Teller is an advocate of
diversity and outreach; as such, she currently is the elected chair of
the Coalition to Diversity Computing, CDC (2004-2005).
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Elaine Weyuker
AT&T Labs - Research
Co-Chair, Technical Papers
Elaine Weyuker is a researcher at AT&T Labs - Research in Florham Park, NJ
who specializes in software testing, reliability, and metrics research and
has written over 125 refereed papers in those areas. She is a member of
the National Academy of Engineering, an IEEE Fellow, an ACM Fellow, and
an AT&T Fellow, as well as the co-chair of the ACM Committee on Women in
Computing (ACM-W), a member of the Board of Directors of the Computing
Research Association, and is a member of the Coalition to Diversify Computing's Steering
Committee. She was the 2004 recipient of the Harlan D. Mills Award,
the Rutgers University Outstanding Alumni Award, and the AT&T Chairman's Award
for Diversity. Before moving to AT&T, she was a computer science professor
at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences of New York University for
many years.
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Vladik Kreinovich
University of Texas at El Paso
Dr. Vladik Kreinovich received his M.S. in Mathematics and Computer
Science from St. Petersburg University, Russia, in 1974, and Ph.D.
from the Institute of Mathematics, Soviet Academy of Sciences,
Novosibirsk, in 1979. In 1975-80, he worked with the Soviet Academy of
Sciences, in particular, in 1978-80, with the Special Astrophysical
Observatory (representation and processing of uncertainty in
radioastronomy). In 1982-89, he worked on error estimation and
intelligent information processing for the National Institute for
Electrical Measuring nstruments, Russia. In 1989, he was a Visiting
Scholar at Stanford niversity. Since 1990, he is with
the Department of Computer Science, University of Texas at El Paso. Also,
served as an invited professor in Paris (University of Paris VI), Hong
Kong, St. Petersburg, Russia, and Brazil.
Main interests: representation and processing of
uncertainty, especially interval computations and intelligent
control. Published 6 books and more than 600 papers. Member of the
editorial board of the international journal "Reliable Computing"
(formerly, "Interval Computations"), and several other
journals. Co-maintainer of the international website on interval
computations.
Honors: Foreign Member of the Russian Academy of Metrological
Sciences; recepient of the 2003 El Paso Energy Foundation Faculty
Achievement Award for Research awarded by the University of Texas at
El Paso.
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Nina Berry
Sandia National Laboratories
Chair, Doctoral Consortium
Nina Berry received a B.S. in Computer Science at Mary
Washington College. She went on to receive a M.S. in
Computer Science and a Ph.D. in Industrial and
Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State.
Dr. Berry is currently a Principal Member of Technical Staff
at Sandia National Laboratories.
Dr. Berry researches software entities known as
intelligent agents. In addition to her numerous
publications, she chairs a standards committee for the
Foundation for Intelligent Physical Agents. Because of
her outstanding accomplishments, Dr. Berry has received a
Women of Color Technology Award in Government and Defense
for Educational Leadership in Government.
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Monica Martinez-Canales
Sandia National Laboratories
Co-Chair, Posters
Monica Martinez-Canales is a senior member of the
technical staff at Sandia National Laboratories where she
engages in research on error estimation of numerical
solutions of partial differential equations, design of
experiments, Bayesian statistics, and uncertainty
quantification.
Dr. Martinez-Canales holds a B.S. in Mathematics from
Stanford University, an M.A. and a Ph.D. in Computational
Applied Mathematics from Rice University. She completed
an NSF Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Dept. of Geological
and Environmental Sciences at Stanford University prior to
joining Sandia National Laboratories.
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Diane C. Jamrog
Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Co-Chair, Posters
Diane C. Jamrog is a technical staff member of the Advanced System
Concepts group at Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. Her research
involves developing mathematical models for a variety of problems,
including models of radar systems and models of disease outbreaks given
various combinations of public health responses.
Dr. Jamrog received her B.A. in Mathematics from Smith College. She
received her M.A. and Ph.D. in Computational and Applied Mathematics
from Rice University. She was a fellow of the W.M. Keck Center for
Computational Biology from 1998-2002 while working on her
interdisciplinary dissertation research. Prior to joining Lincoln
Laboratory, she held a joint postdoc in the Biochemistry and
Computational and Applied Mathematics departments at Rice University.
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M. Brian Blake
Georgetown University
Co-Chair, Panels
M. Brian Blake is currently an associate professor in the Department
of Computer Science, Georgetown University, Washington, DC. He has
published more than 50 journal articles and refereed conference papers
in the domains of workflow and agent-based systems, service-oriented
computing, distributed data management, and software engineering
education. His work has appeared in journals such as the IEEE
Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering, International Journal
of Artificial Intelligence Tools, Annals of Software Engineering,
Software: Practice and Experience, Decision Support Systems, and IEEE
Transactions on Education. He is actively involved in mentoring
underrepresented minorities in K-12 programs in the metro-DC area and
served as the Director of Georgetown University's Minority Mentoring
Program, a program aimed at encouraging minority students to enter
academia. Dr. Blake received the BS degree in electrical engineering
from the Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, the MS degree in
electrical engineering (minor in software engineering) from Mercer
University, Atlanta, Georgia, and the PhD degree in information
technology with a concentration in information and software engineering
from George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia.
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Lorie M. Liebrock
University of New Mexico Tech
Co-Chair, Workshops
Lorie M. Liebrock is an Assistant Professor of Computer
Science at the University of New Mexico Tech. Her research interests
include: high performance and parallel computing, automatic data distribution,
well posedness analysis and information security. She received BS
and MS degrees from Michigan Technological University. She received MS
and PhD degrees from Rice University.
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Robert E. Megginson
University of Michigan
Co-Chair, Workshops
Robert E. Megginson is Professor of Mathematics and Associate Dean at the
University of Michigan. He has recently returned to the University of Michigan
after a two-year term as Deputy Director of the Mathematical Sciences Research
Institute in Berkeley. He received his Ph.D. in functional analysis from the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1984. Megginson has been active
at the national level in programs to address the under-representation of minorities
in mathematics. His recognitions for these efforts include the U.S. Presidential
Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering Mentoring in 1997
and the Ely S. Parker Award of the American Indian Science and Engineering Society
in 1999. He has been named to the Native American Science and Engineering Wall
of Fame at Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute in Albuquerque, and portrayed
in 100 Native Americans Who Shaped American History by Bonnie Juettner, Bluewood
Books, 2002.
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Radha Nandkumar
National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA)
Co-Chair, Fundraising
Radha Nandkumar obtained her Ph. D. in physics from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, U.S.A. Her research interests in the areas of condensed matter physics, extrapolated to astrophysical systems, have extended to observational astronomy, theoretical modeling and computational science. She joined the staff of the National Center for Supercomputing Applications in Illinois in 1985 and has been with the Center since its inception. She has held various responsibilities at NCSA for enabling computational science research and has an in-depth knowledge of current trends in technology and advances in computational science. She has participated in NCSA's strategic planning, management, customer relationships, peer review processes and resource allocations. Most recently she also completed an Executive M.B.A. at the University of Illinois and is in charge of NCSA's Campus Faculty Relations and International Affiliations Program. She is a speaker and a panelist and has made numerous invited presentations globally in the area of high performance computing and computational science. She serves on several committees that promote diversity, women in computing and information technology, and computational science. Her current research interests are related to grid computing.
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Valerie E. Taylor
Texas A&M University
Co-Chair, Fundraising
Valerie E. Taylor earned her Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering
and Computer Science from the University of California,
Berkeley, in 1991. From 1991-2002, Dr. Taylor was a member of the
faculty of Northwestern University. Dr. Taylor has since joined the faculty of
Texas A&M University as Head of the
Dwight Look College of Engineering's Department of Computer Science
and holder of the Stewart & Stevenson Professorship II.
Her research interests are in the areas of computer
architecture and high performance computing, with particular
emphasis on mesh partitioning for distributed systems and
the performance of parallel and distributed
applications. She has authored or co-authored over 70
publications in these areas. Dr. Taylor has received
numerous awards for distinguished leadership and
research.
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Stephenie A. McLean
Texas Advanced Computing Center
Chair, Scholarships
Stephenie McLean is the education, outreach and training director at the
Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) located on the campus of the
University of Texas at Austin. Prior to arriving at TACC, she was the
training and outreach manager for the National Center for Supercomputing
Applications. (NCSA). During much of her career Stephenie has worked to
provide executive awareness, faculty development and educational
opportunities to underrepresented faculty and students in the areas of
science, technology, engineering and math. Stephenie is the director of the
Minority Serving Institutions Network (MSIN), which aims to build a pathway
of diversity in advanced computing and computational science. Stephenie was
recognized for her work in increasing diversity in high performance
computing by HPCWire "2004 Watch List for HPC".
Stephenie holds a M.S. in Journalism from Murray State University. She is a
member of the Institute for African American E-Culture (iAAEC), ACM, Global
Grid Forum (GGF), Coalition to Diversify Computing (CDC) and serves on the
2005 Supercomputing Conference Executive Planning Committee.
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Jon Bashor
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Chair, Public Relations
Jon Bashor is the communications manager for the Computing Sciences organization at the
Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Jon has also served as the
communications chair for the SC2003 Conference and the International Supercomputer Conference
(2004, 2005) held in Heidelberg, Germany.
Jon earned his master's degree in journalism at UC Berkeley. His professional experience also
includes six years with the Lawrence Livermore National Lab Public Affairs Office, two years
in public relations, and eight years as a reporter with several newspapers in the San Francisco Bay Area.
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Carla Romero
Computing Research Association
Chair, Student Volunteers
As Director of Programs at CRA, Carla is involved with the broad range of programs focusing on
human resources, on community-building, and on connecting CRA with the other organizations
advancing science and engineering. She supports several CRA committees such as the Committee
on the Status of Women in Computing Research (CRA-W), Coalition to Diversity Computing (CDC),
the IT Deans Group, and others. Before coming to CRA, Carla designed and implemented educational
programs at universities in Texas and New Mexico to encourage and support the participation of
students from underrepresented groups in STEM disciplines and served on several board including AISTEC,
Hispanic WomenÕs Network and Expanding Your Horizons.
A native of New Mexico and first-generation college graduate, Carla received
her B.A. in English, pre-law at the University of New Mexico, and her M.P.A. at the University of
Texas, El Paso. She uses some of her free time assisting grass roots non-profit organizations and
Latino/a artists in the areas of marketing, public relations, and fundraising.
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Eric Brittain
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Website
Eric Brittain is a PhD student at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology (MIT). He is in the Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science department. His area of research is Educational Technology.
Eric received the MS degree in Computer Science at MIT. He also received
MS and BS degrees in Computer Science at Clark Atlanta
University. He is a member of the Coalition to Diversify Computing (CDC).
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