Tue 19 Jun 2018 08:55 - 09:15 at Columbus Ballroom A - Session A Chair(s): Michael Carbin

An opportunity to introduce yourself to your fellow workshop attendees and get to know each other!

Michelle has been a professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Arizona since August 2015. Prof. Strout’s main research area is high performance computing and her research interests include compilers and run-time systems, scientific computing, and software engineering. She earned her Ph.D. at the University of California, San Diego in 2003 with Jeanne Ferrante and Larry Carter as co-advisors. In 2008, Michelle received a CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation for her research in parallelization techniques for irregular applications, such as molecular dynamics simulations. In 2010, she received a DOE Early Career award to fund her research in separating the specification of scientific computing applications from the specification of implementation details such as how to parallelize such computations. Some of Prof. Strout’s research contributions include the Universal Occupancy Vector (UOV) for determining storage mappings for any legal schedule in a stencil computation, the Sparse Polyhedral Framework (SPF) for specifying inspector-executor loop transformations, dataflow analysis for MPI programs, parameterized and full versus partial tiling with the outset and insets, and loop chaining for scheduling across stencil loops.

Tue 19 Jun

Displayed time zone: Eastern Time (US & Canada) change

08:45 - 10:30
08:45
10m
Day opening
Introduction and Welcome
PLMW @ PLDI
Michael Carbin MIT, Milind Kulkarni Purdue University, Michelle Strout University of Arizona
08:55
20m
Social Event
Icebreaker
PLMW @ PLDI
Michelle Strout University of Arizona
09:15
45m
Talk
What Programming Language Researchers Do and How to Become One
PLMW @ PLDI
10:00
30m
Talk
Intermittent Computing Systems
PLMW @ PLDI
Brandon Lucia Carnegie Mellon University