{"id":3183,"date":"2010-07-13T12:01:00","date_gmt":"2010-07-13T12:01:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blogs.msdn.microsoft.com\/msr_er\/2010\/07\/13\/rashid-hey-award-2010-microsoft-research-faculty-fellows-during-faculty-summit\/"},"modified":"2016-09-29T21:12:51","modified_gmt":"2016-09-30T04:12:51","slug":"rashid-hey-award-2010-microsoft-research-faculty-fellows-during-faculty-summit","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/en-us\/research\/blog\/rashid-hey-award-2010-microsoft-research-faculty-fellows-during-faculty-summit\/","title":{"rendered":"Rashid, Hey Award 2010 Microsoft Research Faculty Fellows During Faculty Summit"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Tony Hey, corporate vice president, Microsoft External Research, a division of Microsoft Research<\/i><\/p>\n

Rick Rashid, senior vice president of Microsoft Research, and Tony Hey, corporate vice president of the External Research division of Microsoft Research, join recipients of the 2010 Microsoft Research Faculty Fellows awards. Rashid (left) is accompanied by (left to right) Evimaria Terzi, Haiying (Helen) Shen, abhi shelat, Raanan Fattal, Doug Downey, Sinan Aral, and Hey. Not pictured: recipient Cyrill Stachniss. (Photo by Michael Nakamura)<\/p><\/div>\n

This morning, on the second day of Faculty Summit 2010<\/a>, we at Microsoft Research are proud to announce seven of the world’s top university researchers as this year’s awardees for the Microsoft Research Faculty Fellows grant program. In its sixth year, the rigorous application process was opened to an international audience, giving away $1.4 million, with no strings attached. This year’s awards will help to further research in the exhilarating fields of mobile robotics, natural language processing, algorithmic data mining with an emphasis on social-network analysis, and cryptography.<\/p>\n

Microsoft Research provides the fellows with support designed to have a tangible impact on their research. Each fellow receives a $200,000 award, to be used at his or her discretion for an unrestricted range of expenses that, in past years, have included planning research agendas, hiring graduate students, building labs, and purchasing equipment. Since the 2005 inception of the Faculty Fellows program, more than $7 million has been awarded to 37 professors from 22 universities. These funds are used to explore high-impact research that has the potential to solve some of today’s most challenging problems.<\/p>\n

This year’s fellows were chosen as a result of a multitier selection process that includes more than 100 reviewers, whose goal is to identify the future leaders of academic research while they are at the beginning of their careers. From three continents, 120 initial nominees were narrowed to 18 finalists, chosen to be interviewed by a panel of Microsoft Research executives, researchers, and faculty members from leading universities. Of those 18 finalists, the following seven were announced as the Microsoft Research 2010 Faculty Fellows:<\/p>\n