##SENDGRIDOPENTRACKING##
Email not displaying correctly? View in browser
 

Bulletin #10 Friday 8th, March, 2024

 

Important Dates & Reminders

Saturday, March 9, 2024 Winter Classes End

Monday, March 11, 2024 Winter Examinations Begin

Saturday, March 16, 2024 Spring Break Begins

 
 

We want to hear from you! Please send any upcoming news and events to news@cs.northwestern.edu to be included in future bulletins &/featured on our socials/website.

Events must be emailed at least two (2) business days in advance.

 

In this Issue

Upcoming Seminars:

Wednesday 27th March

" “Parallelism First”: New Foundations for Provably Efficient and Safe Parallel Programming " (Sam Westrick)

 

Northwestern Events

 

News

Upcoming CS Seminars

Missed a seminar? No worries!

View past seminars via the Northwestern CS Website

(northwestern login required).

View Past Seminars
 

March

27th - Sam Westrick

 

Wednesday/ CS Seminar
March 27th / 12:00 PM

In Person / Mudd 3514

" “Parallelism First”: New Foundations for Provably Efficient and Safe Parallel Programming "

Abstract

In recent decades, architectural advances have brought parallelism to the mainstream. However, due to a variety of performance and correctness issues in practice, developing parallel software remains difficult—even for experts. This difficulty is exacerbated by the fact that mainstream languages are designed for sequential execution by default, and do not provide strong guarantees on safety and performance for parallel programs.

 

To address the difficulty of parallel programming, my research puts parallelism first: we assume parallel execution by default, and rethink fundamental abstractions from the ground up to provide guarantees on both safety and performance. In this talk, I highlight two contributions in particular: (1) disentanglement, which enables provably efficient parallel garbage collection, and (2) automatic parallelism management, which provides a solution to the long-standing granularity control problem. All of this work is implemented in MaPLe: an open-source compiler and run-time system that we built from the ground up for provably efficient and safe parallel programming. MaPLe is currently being used at Carnegie Mellon University to help teach parallel programming to over 500 students every year, and our empirical results show that MaPLe can compete with the performance of hand-optimized code written in languages such as C/C++. To conclude, I discuss my future research plans, working towards making it simpler and safer to develop high-performance parallel software.

 
Biography

Sam Westrick is a post-doc at Carnegie Mellon University, working with Umut Acar on parallel programming languages, compilers and run-time systems, and parallel algorithms. He received his PhD from Carnegie Mellon in 2022, and he is the lead developer of MaPLe, a high-level language for efficient and safe parallel programming. His work has been recognized with multiple distinguished paper awards, and in 2023 he received the ACM SIGPLAN Dissertation Award for his work on Efficient and Scalable Parallel Functional Programming Through Disentanglement.

 

Research Interests/Area

parallel programming, programming languages, compilers and run-time systems, parallel algorithms

Steven Micklethwaite Seminar

Please join us Tuesday, March 12th at 12 PM for the seminar “Resourcing minerals for decarbonization: Research at the University of Queensland” with Dr. Steven Micklethwaite. 

 

RSVP here- lunch provided!

 

Steven Micklethwaite, Program Leader, Resourcing Decarbonisation Program & Associate Professor

Sustainable Minerals Institute, University of Queensland

 

Please feel free to reach out to 

engineeringsustainability@northwestern.edu

with any questions.

 

Tuesday, March 12th, 2024 | 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM

Ford Design Center Room 1.350 (ITW Classroom)

2133 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208

SONIC Research Lab Spring Internships

SONIC Research lab has several internship opportunities for Spring Quarter. 


For more information email Dorothea Boyle dorothea.boyle@northwestern.edu or visit sonic.northwestern.edu

Various

Online Applications

Northwestern Medicine Healthcare AI Forum

The Northwestern Medicine Healthcare AI Forum dives into cutting-edge developments in the field of AI for healthcare. Presenters share the latest published research and technology innovation, and facilitate discussion among attendees.

 

Open to the entire Northwestern Medicine community, the forum is presented by the Center for Collaborative AI in Healthcare, Institute for Artificial Intelligence in Medicine (I.AIM). 

Fridays Bi-Weekly 10:00 AM CT

Hybrid

Register »

3rd Annual Traditional Spring Pow Wow- Hosted by NAISA

Hosted by Northwestern's Native American and Indigenous Student Alliance

 

Contact: NAISAPOWWOW@gmail.com

Saturday, April 27, 2024
11:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Welsh Ryan Arena

2705 Ashland Ave, Evanston, IL 60208

Karan Ahuja Wins ACM SIGCHI Outstanding Dissertation Award

The dissertation advances the state of the art in high-fidelity user tracking and digitization and opens new paradigms in augmented and virtual reality, health sensing, and natural user interfaces.

 

Read More

CASMI Recognizes Research Focused on Preventing, Mitigating AI Harms

Four papers were accepted to the safety-focused "AI Incidents and Best Practices" track at the Thirty-Sixth Annual Conference on Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence.

 

Read More

Society of Women Engineers Hosts 2024 Career Day for Girls

Around 180 Chicago-area middle school and high school students signed up to visit campus as part of the February 24 event.

 

Read More

View all News »

Shape-shifting ultrasound stickers detect post-surgical complications

First-of-its-kind device ‘tags’ an organ to monitor abnormal, life-threatening fluid leaks

 

Read More

© Robert R. McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science, Northwestern University

Northwestern Department of Computer Science

Mudd Hall, 2233 Tech Drive, Third Floor, Evanston, Illinois, 60208

Unsubscribe