Congratulations to CSEE graduate students Josiah Dykstra (Computer Science, Ph.D.) and Han Dong (Computer Science, M.S.) for winning the Computer Science and Electrical Engineering (CSEE) Department's 2011-2012 awards for best research by a Ph.D. student and best research by an M.S. student, respectively.
Winners were chosen based on the scientific merit (significance, originality, notriviality, correctness) and the writing style of their research papers.
Josiah's (pictured left) research, entitled "Acquiring Forensic Evidence from Infrastructure-as-a-Service Cloud Computing: Exploring and Evaluating Tools, Trust, and Techniques", deals with digital forensics for cloud computing, including frameworks, tools, and legal analysis to facilitate forensic investigations of remote Infrastructure-as-a-Service clouds. You can read Josiah's full paper here.
Han's (pictured right) research, entitled "Cross-Platform OpenCL Code and Performance Portability for CPU and GPU Architectures Investigated with a Climate and Weather Physics Model", investigates the portability of OpenCL across CPU and GPU architectures in terms of code and performance via a
representative NASA GEOS-5 climate and weather physics model. Han discovered that OpenCL's vector-oriented programming paradigm assists compilers with implicit vectorization and creates significant performance gains. You can read Han's full paper here.
CSEE graduate students Karuna Joshi (Computer Science, Ph.D.) and James MacGlashan (Computer Science, Ph.D.) were awarded honorable mention.
As this year's winners, both Josiah and Han will present their work at this year's CSEE Research Review, which takes place this Friday, May 4 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the large conference room of the UMBC Technology Center's business incubator and accelerator building.