{"id":307664,"date":"2007-02-17T12:00:14","date_gmt":"2007-02-17T20:00:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/en-us\/research\/?p=307664"},"modified":"2018-05-30T11:00:50","modified_gmt":"2018-05-30T18:00:50","slug":"four-microsoft-research-named-acm-fellows","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/en-us\/research\/blog\/four-microsoft-research-named-acm-fellows\/","title":{"rendered":"Four from Microsoft Research Named ACM Fellows"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Rob Knies, Managing Editor, Microsoft Research<\/p>\n
On Jan. 8, the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) announced that it had recognized 41 of its members for their contributions to \u201cthe practical and theoretical aspects of computing and information technology.\u201d Four of these new <\/em>ACM fellows<\/em><\/a> are from Microsoft Research: <\/em>Susan Dumais<\/em><\/a>, Albert Greenberg, <\/em>Jim Larus<\/em>, and <\/em>Harry Shum<\/em><\/a>. The latest ACM fellows were cited for making \u201csignificant advances that are having lasting effects on the lives of citizens throughout the world,\u201d and the Microsoft Research contingent, in particular, was commended for \u201ccontributions ranging from information retrieval and human-computer interaction to programming languages, compilers and computer architecture to computer graphics.\u201d The ACM will formally recognize its newest fellows in San Diego on June 9 during the organization\u2019s annual awards banquet. Presenting Microsoft Research\u2019s latest ACM fellows:<\/em><\/p>\n Susan Dumais<\/strong><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Title:<\/strong> Principal researcher Immediate reaction upon receiving the news:<\/strong> \u201cI was actually away from the office when ACM sent out the (paper) acknowledgement, so I didn’t know about it for a while. I heard about the honor rather indirectly, from a colleague who had written a letter in support of my nomination. I was tremendously honored to be recognized by my colleagues for technical contributions.\u201d<\/p>\n Key career accomplishments:<\/strong> \u201cMuch of my work has been at the intersection of information retrieval and human-computer interaction\u2014trying to improve how people find and organize information. Two pieces of work characterize the interdisciplinary nature of my interests. The first is older work on Latent Semantic Indexing, which uses statistical analyses of large collections of text to overcome the mismatch between users\u2019 and authors\u2019 vocabularies. The other is more recent work on Stuff I’ve Seen, which takes advantage of the rich memories that people have about information that they have previously interacted with to make it easier for them to get back to that information. Some of the ideas from this project are evident in Windows Desktop Search, which is great.\u201d<\/p>\n Albert Greenberg<\/strong><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Title:\u00a0<\/strong>Principal researcher Immediate reaction upon receiving the news:<\/strong> \u201cI was thrilled to learn about the recognition, as well as grateful to my peers for the nomination.\u201d<\/p>\n Key career accomplishments:<\/strong> \u201cI view my top accomplishment as having invented, prototyped, and then implemented methods that are now fundamental to design and management of large-scale IP networks. On one hand, the work put IP network management on a sound scientific footing, and on the other hand, the work spun off robust tools and capabilities that improved operational network and systems automation and reliability. I am joining Microsoft from AT&T. The ideas and systems that I came up with and implemented with my colleagues at AT&T are now part of the fabric of AT&T\u2019s global network; in particular, you cannot touch AT&T\u2019s backbone without going through some of these systems. With Victor Bahl<\/a>\u2019s team, I am excited about the opportunities to have similar impact on efforts at Microsoft, such as the Live platform, IPTV, enterprise network and systems management products, and IPv6.\u201d<\/p>\n Jim Larus<\/strong><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Title:<\/strong> Research Area Manager Immediate reaction upon receiving the news: <\/strong>\u201cI was extremely happy to receive this recognition. It was a great honor.\u201d<\/p>\n Key career accomplishments:<\/strong> \u201cMy top accomplishments are my work with Tom Ball<\/a> on optimal profiling and test, my work with Mark Hill and David Wood on the Wisconsin Wind Tunnel project, starting the Software Productivity Tools group at Microsoft Research, and the Singularity<\/a> project that I\u2019m running with Galen Hunt<\/a> at Microsoft Research.\u201d<\/p>\n
\nLab: <\/strong>Microsoft Research Redmond<\/a>
\nGroup: <\/strong>Adaptive Systems and Interaction Group<\/a>
\nJoined Microsoft Research:<\/strong> July 1997
\nReason for ACM citation:<\/strong> For research contributions to information retrieval and human-computer interaction.<\/p>\n
\nLab:<\/strong> Microsoft Research Redmond
\nGroup: <\/strong>Networking Research Group<\/a>
\nJoined Microsoft Research:<\/strong> January 2007
\nReason for ACM citation:<\/strong> For contributions to Internet measurement and engineering.<\/p>\n
\nLab:<\/strong> Microsoft Research Redmond
\nGroup:<\/strong> Software Improvement Group
\nJoined Microsoft Research:<\/strong> August 1998
\nReason for ACM citation:<\/strong> For contributions to programming languages, compilers, and computer architecture.<\/p>\n