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Francine Berman To Receive Kennedy Award for Cyberinfrastructure Leadership
The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) and the IEEE
Computer Society (IEEE-CS) will jointly present the inaugural
Ken Kennedy Award to Francine Berman, vice president for
research at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Berman is being
recognized for her efforts to build a national
cyberinfrastructure.
Berman will receive the 2009 Kennedy Award at the SC09 Conference
November 14-20 in Portland, Ore.
Berman was cited for “her influential leadership in the
design, development, and deployment of national-scale
cyberinfrastructure.” She is a leading advocate for the
development of a national-scale cyberinfrastructure for the
access, use, stewardship, and preservation of the digital data
that forms the foundation of the Information Age.
ACM and IEEE-CS co-sponsor the Kennedy Award, which was
established in 2009 to recognize substantial contributions to
programmability and productivity in computing and significant
community service or mentoring contributions. It was named for
Ken Kennedy, the founder of Rice University’s nationally ranked
computer science program, who was one of the world’s foremost
experts on high-performance computing.
Berman joined Rensselaer in August 2009 from the University
of California, San Diego, where she served a High Performance
Computing Endowed Chair and director of the San Diego
Supercomputer Center.
Berman is widely recognized as a pioneer in the effort to
build a stronger digital infrastructure in the United States,
known as a cyberinfrastructure, and has been named as a
technology leader by Newsweek,
BusinessWeek, and IEEE
Spectrum.
Berman is one of the two founding principal investigators of
the National Science Foundation’s TeraGrid project, the
largest open scientific research infrastructure connecting
supercomputer centers across the nation. She also served as
director of the National Partnership for Advanced Computational
Infrastructure, a consortium of 41 research groups and
institutions with the goal of building a national
infrastructure to support research and education in science and
engineering.
In addition to these leadership roles, she has served on a
variety of national and international committees, including the
Engineering Advisory Committee of the National Science
Foundation, the National Institutes of General Medical Sciences
Advisory Committee of the National Institutes of Health, and
the Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology Board of
Trustees. She is currently the co-chair for the international
Blue Ribbon Task Force for Sustainable Digital Preservation and
Access, whose goal is to develop economically sustainable
strategies to preserve our often fragile digital
information.
Her research places her at the forefront of information and
communication in the increasingly digital age. She has written
more than 165 articles, editorials, and reports on her
research, which spans the areas of high-performance computing,
grid computing, scheduling, programming environments and
middleware, cyberinfrastructure, and digital data stewardship
and preservation. She is a fellow of the Association of
Computing Machinery (ACM) and senior member of the IEEE.
Berman is a native of California, and earned her bachelor’s
in mathematics in 1973 from the University of California, Los
Angeles. She went on to earn her master’s and doctorate in
mathematics from the University of Washington. She began her
teaching career at Purdue University in 1979, and joined UCSD
in 1984.
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Published
October 21,
2009 |
Contact: Gabrielle DeMarco
Phone: (518) 276-6542
E-mail: demarg@rpi.edu |
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