January 28, 2002
Chris Carothers Receives NSF CAREER Award for
Networking Research
Troy, N.Y. — A new computation technique, developed by
researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, could lead to
more effective Internet traffic management and congestion
control.
Christopher Carothers, assistant professor of computer
science, received a Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER)
Award from the National Science Foundation to study reverse
computation in the simulation and modeling of large-scale
networks such as the Internet. Carothers, a Rensselaer faculty
member since 1998, was awarded $375,000 over five years.
When used in large-scale systems, reverse computation —
literally running a program backward — will allow network
managers to backtrack to the source of congestion. Bandwidth
demand and availability are doubling, but so-called “killer
applications” such as Napster and SETI@home (where people
enlist their home PCs in the search for extraterrestrial life)
create intense Internet bandwidth demand and create Internet
congestion.
Current techniques require managers to explore all possible
paths to the congestion, a time-consuming effort. Carothers
believes reverse computation will help network managers find
trouble spots before congestion occurs. His techniques could
decrease processing time by at least a factor of 10 if not
more, depending on the complexity of the system, and aid in the
rapid design of future network systems.
“Using this reverse technique will give us more than the ’best
guess’ scenarios we currently have when designing networks and
simulation experiments,” Carothers said. “We will also have the
capability to quickly rule out events that are not connected to
congestion.”
The CAREER Award, aimed at young faculty members actively
engaged in research and education, is one of the NSF’s most
competitive and prestigious awards.
Contact: Patricia Azriel
Phone: (518) 276-6531
E-mail: N/A