ACM/IEEE-CS George Michael Memorial HPC Fellowship
Endowed in memory of George Michael, one of the founding fathers of the SC Conference series, the ACM/IEEE-CS George Michael Memorial Fellowships honor exceptional PhD students throughout the world whose research focus areas are in high performance computing, networking, storage, and large-scale data analysis. ACM, the IEEE Computer Society, and the SC Conference support this award. Fellowship winners are selected each year based on overall potential for research excellence, the degree to which technical interests align with those of the HPC community, academic progress to date, recommendations by their advisor and others, and a demonstration of current and anticipated use of HPC resources.
The Fellowship includes a $5,000 honorarium, plus travel and registration to receive the award at the annual SC conference.
Nomination deadline extended to 8 May 2013.
Fellowship Nominations Site: http://sc13.supercomputing.org/content/acmieee-cs-george-michael-memorial-hpc-fellowship
ACM/IEEE-CS George Michael Memorial HPC Fellowship Recipients
2012 WinnersMultiscale Hemodynamics
Ryan Gabrys, UCLA - Computer Science, Storage
Extending The Lifetime of New Storage Devices Using Coding Techniques
2012 Honorable Mention
Yanhua Sun, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign - Computer Science, Performance
Performance Analysis and Optimization of a message-drive asynchronous parallel programming model on Exascale.
Gagan Gupta, University of Wisconsin-Madison - Computer Science
Restartable Parallel Execution of Sequential Programs on HPCs
2011 Winners Ignacio Laguna, Purdue Univerity
Scalable error detection and bug localization tools
Xinyu Que, Auburn University
2011 Honorable Mention
Leonardo Arturo Bautista Gomez, Tokyo Institute of Technology
Michael J. Duchene, University of Notre Dame
2010 Winners Amanda Peters, Harvard University - Applications, Biomedical
Multiscale simulation of cardiovascular flows on the IBM Bluegene/P: full heart-circulation system at red-blood cell resolution
Aparna Chandramowlishwaran, Georgia Institute of Technology - Algorithms
Autotuning N-body computations using novel parallel programming models
2010 Honorable Mention
Matthew R. Norman, North Carolina State University - Applications
Harnessing Petascale Computing Resources for Atmospheric Climate Simulation: An Algorithmic Approach
Sara Baghsorkhi, University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign - Computer Science, Performance
A Performance Analyzing Tool for GPU Computing
2009 Winners Nathan Tallent, Rice University - Computer Science
Performance Tools for HPF
Abhinav Bhatele, University of Illinois – Urbana/Champaign - Computer Science
Topology-aware task mapping
2009 Honorable Mention
Mark Silberstein, Technion - Israel - Applications, Biology
Genetic linkage analysis
Amanda Peters, Harvard University - Applications, Biomedical
Cardiovascular Disease
2008 Winners Yaniv Erlich, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory - Applications, Biology
A self optimizing base-caller for next-generation DNA sequencing technologies using HPCC
Douglas J. Mason, Harvard University - Physics/ Applications and Algorithms
Graphene Nanotube
Yong Chen, Illinois Institute of Technology - Systems
A Hybrid Data Prefetching Architecture for Data Access Efficiency
2008 Honorable Mention
Daniel Quest, University of Nebraska Medical Center - Application, Biology
Transcription Networks
Samer Al Kiswany, University of British Columbia - Systems and Storage
Using GPUs to handle very large data
Sean M. Couch, The University of Texas at Austin - Applications, Astronomy
Using the Flash Code on New Systems for New Insights
2007 Winners Mark Hoemmen, University of California at Berkeley - Computer Science, Algorithms
Algorithms - communication-avoiding linear algebra
Arpith Jacob, Washington University in St. Louis - Architecture, Genomics
Hardware Architecture – FPGA use that accelerates DNA sequence analysis
Chao Wang, North Carolina State University - Computer Science, Storage
System Software - Fault tolerance for extreme scale systems
2007 Honorable Mention
Yong Chen, Illinois Institute of Technology - Applications, CFD
System Software – Parallel I/O Concurrency
Kamesh Madduri, Georgia Institute of Technology - Computer Science, Algorithms
Efficient solutions for large scale graph theory
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