ACM names fellows for supercomputing

2014 Fellows Made Computing Contributions to Enterprise, Entertainment, and Education

ACM www.acm.org has recognized 47 of its members for their contributions to computing that are driving innovations across multiple domains and disciplines.  The 2014 ACM Fellowshttp://fellows.acm.org, who hail from some of the world’s leading universities, corporations, and research labs, have achieved advances in computing research and development that are driving innovation and sustaining economic development around the world.

ACM President Alexander L. Wolf acknowledged the advances made by this year’s ACM Fellows.   “Our world has been immeasurably improved by the impact of their innovations.  We recognize their contributions to the dynamic computing technologies that are making a difference to the study of computer science, the community of computing professionals, and the countless consumers and citizens who are benefiting from their creativity and commitment.” 

The 2014 ACM Fellows have been cited for contributions to key computing fields including data base mining and design; artificial intelligence and machine learning; cryptography and verification; Internet security and privacy; computer vision and medical imaging; electronic design automation and human-computer interaction.

ACM will formally recognize the 2014 Fellows at its annual Awards Banquet in June 2015, in San Francisco. Additional information about the ACM 2014 Fellows, the awards event, as well as previous ACM Fellows and award winners is available at http://awards.acm.org/.

2014 ACM Fellows

  • Samson Abramsky

University of Oxford

For contributions to domains in logical form, game semantics, categorical quantum mechanics and contextual semantics

  • Vikram Adve

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

For developing the LLVM compiler and for contributions to parallel computing and software security

  • Foto Afrati
  • Charles Bachman

Retired

For contributions to database technology, notably the integrated data store

  • Allan Borodin

University of Toronto

For contributions to theoretical computer science, in complexity, online algorithms, resource tradeoffs, and models of algorithmic paradigms

National Technical University of Athens

For contributions to the theory of database systems

  • Alan Bundy

University of Edinburgh

For contributions to artificial intelligence, automated reasoning, and the formation and evolution of representations

  • Lorrie Cranor

Carnegie Mellon University

For contributions to research and education in usable privacy and security

  • Timothy A. Davis

Texas A&M University

For contributions to sparse matrix algorithms and software

  • Srinivas Devadas

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

For contributions to secure and energy-efficient hardware

  • Inderjit Dhillon

University of Texas at Austin

For contributions to large-scale data analysis, machine learning and computational mathematics

  • Nikil D. Dutt

University of California, Irvine

For contributions to embedded architecture exploration and service to electronic design automation and embedded systems

  • Faith Ellen

University of Toronto

For contributions to data structures, and the theory of distributed and parallel computing

  • Michael D. Ernst

University of Washington

For contributions to software analysis, testing, and verification

  • Adam Finkelstein

Princeton University

For contributions to non-photorealistic rendering, multi-resolution representations, and computer graphics

  • Juliana Freire

New York University

For contributions to provenance management research and technology, and computational reproducibility

  • Johannes Gehrke

Cornell University

For contributions to data mining and data stream query processing

  • Eric Grimson

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

For contributions to computer vision and medical image computing

  • Mark Guzdial

Georgia Institute of Technology

For contributions to computing education, and broadening participation

  • Gernot Heiser

University of New South Wales/National Information and Communications Technology Australia (NICTA) Research Centre of Excellence

For contributions demonstrating that provably correct operating systems are feasible and suitable for real-world use

  • Eric Horvitz

Microsoft Research

For contributions to artificial intelligence and human-computer interaction

  • Thorsten Joachims

Cornell University

For contributions to the theory and practice of machine learning and information retrieval

  • Michael Kearns

University of Pennsylvania

For contributions to machine learning, artificial intelligence, and algorithmic game theory and computational social science 

  • Valerie King

University of Victoria

For contributions to randomized algorithms, especially dynamic graph algorithms and fault tolerant distributed computing

  • Sarit Kraus

Bar Ilan University

For contributions to artificial intelligence, including multi-agent systems, human-agent interaction and non-monotonic reasoning

  • Leslie Lamport

Microsoft Research

For contributions to the theory and practice of distributed and concurrent systems

  • Sharad Malik

Princeton University

For contributions to efficient and capable SAT solvers, and accurate embedded software models

  • Yishay Mansour

Tel-Aviv University

For contributions to machine learning, algorithmic game theory, distributed computing, and communication networks

  • Subhasish Mitra

Stanford University

For contributions to the design and testing of robust computing systems

  • Michael Mitzenmacher

Harvard University

For contributions to coding theory, hashing algorithms and data structures, and networking algorithms

  • Robert Morris

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

For contributions to computer networking, distributed systems, and operating systems

  • Vijaykrishnan Narayanan

Pennsylvania State University

For contributions to power estimation and optimization in the design of power-aware systems

  • Shamkant B. Navathe

Georgia Institute of Technology

For contributions to data modeling, database design, and database education

  • Jignesh M. Patel

University of Wisconsin, Madison

For contributions to high-performance database query processing methods, in particular on spatial data

  • Parthasarathy Ranganathan

Google Inc.

For contributions to the areas of energy efficiency and server architectures

  • Omer Reingold

Microsoft Research

For contributions to the study of pseudorandomness, derandomization and cryptography

  • Tom Rodden

University of Nottingham

For contributions to ubiquitous computing and computer supported cooperative work

  • Ronitt Rubinfeld

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

For contributions to delegated computation, sublinear time algorithms and property testing

  • Daniela Rus

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

For contributions to robotics and sensor networks

  • Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli

University of California, Berkeley

For contributions to electronic design automation

  • Henning Schulzrinne

Columbia University

For contributions to the design of protocols, applications, and algorithms for Internet multimedia

  • Stuart Shieber

Harvard University

For contributions to natural-language processing, and to open-access systems and policy

  • Ramakrishnan Srikant

Google Inc.

For contributions to knowledge discovery and data mining

  • Aravind Srinivasan

University of Maryland, College Park

For contributions to algorithms, probabilistic methods, and networks

  • S. Sudarshan

Indian Institute of Technology Bombay

For contributions to database education, query processing, query optimization and key word queries

  • Paul Syverson

Naval Research Lab

For contributions to and leadership in the theory and practice of privacy and security

  • Gene Tsudik

University of California, Irvine

For contributions to Internet security and privacy

  • Steve Whittaker

University of California, Santa Cruz

For contributions to human computer interaction