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CRA Conference at Snowbird 2004
July 11-13, 2004
Snowbird, Utah
Preliminary Program
Unless noted otherwise, all slides are
posted in PDF format
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Sunday, July 11
|
8:00 AM - 2:45 PM |
CRA Board of Directors Meeting (begins Saturday 6PM) |
2:00 - 7:30 PM |
Conference Registration
|
3:00 - 6:00 PM |
Workshop for New Department Chairs
Chairs:
Randy Bryant (Carnegie Mellon University)
Marc Snir (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign)
Speakers:
Cynthia Brown (Portland State University)
Rami Melhem (University of Pittsburgh)
J Strother Moore (University of Texas at Austin)
Margaret Wright (New York University)
|
6:00 - 7:00 PM |
Welcome Reception |
7:00 - 9:00 PM |
Dinner
Keynote Speaker:
Vinton G. Cerf, Senior Vice President Technology Strategy, MCI
Internet Future
Dr. Cerf will discuss the evolution of networking and computing, looking
for models of distributed computing that will help to clarify what algorithms
will benefit from GRID-like treatment. Optimal allocation of resources
and identification of potential performance bottlenecks for various algorithms
is a desirable outcome. Few answers will be offered, but many questions
and challenges will be open to discussion. Along the way, he will talk
about the evolution of the Internet and its impact on computing environments.
|
Monday, July 12
|
7:00 - 8:30 AM |
Breakfast Buffet |
7:30 AM - 6:00
PM |
Conference
Registration
|
8:30 - 8:40 AM |
Welcome
Speakers:
Moshe Vardi, Rice University (Academic Snowbird Chair)
Dick Waters, MERL (Labs/Centers Snowbird Chair)
|
PLENARY SESSION I
8:40- 10:00 AM |
Academic CS Education Après Le Crash
The post-2000 environment for academic CS is quite different
from the one we got used to in the late 1990s. IT jobs are moving
offshore and undergraduate enrollments
are down, but graduate enrollments seem to be up, and faculty retention
does not seem to be a problem. Three deans will review the new environment.
Chair:
Moshe Vardi (Rice University)
Speakers:
Maria Klawe (Princeton University)
Richard Newton (UC Berkeley)
Jeffrey Vitter (Purdue University)
|
10:00 - 10:30 AM |
Break
|
Workshop I (four parallel sessions)
10:30
AM – Noon
|
Computing-Related Policy Issues
Concerns over issues of privacy and intellectual rights
have led to new laws and regulations. Researchers can run afoul of these
laws in the course of their work, often without knowing it. Examples
include wiretapping laws covering data collection used for network security
and performance analysis, and research into reverse-engineering mechanisms
violating the DMCA. This session will address some notable examples
of where researchers should be concerned, and will speculate about future
conflicts.
Chair:
Eugene Spafford (Purdue University)
Speakers:
Charles
Brownstein (Computer Science and Telecommunications Board)
Jeff Grove (ACM Washington
Office)
Peter Harsha (CRA)
Barbara Simons (ACM)
New Models for Programs in CE
Discussion of cooperation, competition, and co-dependence
between computer science and computer engineering degree programs.
Chair:
James Aylor (University of Virginia)
Speakers:
Srinivas Devadas (MIT)
Milos Ercegovac (UCLA)
Complexity vs. Robustness in the Information Infrastructure
Our information infrastructure is gaining ever more
functional and trust requirements. Yet, most software systems are already
very complicated by almost any metric. Programmers, administrators,
and users often view today's systems on which they work as ungainly
and run amuck. While we might like to justify our problems by the newness
of our discipline, it is now over 50-years old, and many overly complex
systems have been built using widely prescribed techniques of modularity
and layered abstraction. This session will explore issues of the growing
complexity in systems, and discuss how to address the growth in functional
requirements with the need for increased resiliency. We will address
both research-and education-related topics.
Chair:
Alfred Spector (IBM)
Speakers:
John Doyle (California Institute of Technology)
Clive Dym (Harvey Mudd College)
Stuart Feldman (IBM)
Trends in Research Funding 1
This workshop will report on federal research funding
priorities and initiatives, with a focus on recent developments at NSF-CISE
and DARPA-IPTO.
Chair:
Moshe Vardi (Rice University)
Speakers:
Greg Andrews (NSF CISE)
Ron Brachman (DARPA IPTO)
|
Noon - 1:30 PM |
Luncheon
|
PLENARY SESSION II
1:30 - 3:00 PM |
Stop the Female Brain Drain
Because neither society nor the discipline of computer
science can afford to waste the talents women could contribute, it is
important to retain the relatively few undergraduate women who choose
the major. Recent research shows that faculty are key to successful
retention of women in computer science. This talk will first describe
the imbalance in current enrollments, and then identify and discuss
which faculty actions promote successful retention of women students.
Chair:
Lori Clarke (University of Massachusetts, Amherst)
Speaker:
Joanne McGrath Cohoon (University of Virginia)
|
3:00 - 3:30 PM |
Break
|
Workshop II (four parallel sessions)
3:30 - 5:00 PM |
Politically Incorrect, Fast-Pitch, Hardball Questions About Diversity
in Computing
Richard Tapia, Rice University, will give a 20-minute
presentation on diversity in computing, based on a number of difficult
questions that have been asked of him in the past. The audience will
write questions they would like to ask on index cards, and Dr. Tapia
will answer as many as time permits.
Chair:
Bryant York (Portland State University)
Speaker:
Richard Tapia (Rice University)
Implementing the Fluency Report: Models and Experience
In 1999, the National Research Council published Being
Fluent with Information Technology. The report, sometimes jokingly called
"Computer Literacy on Steroids," recommended a substantial
knowledge upgrade for the general population. Many departments have
used the report as an opportunity to rethink their service course offerings
and to consider alternate ways of implementing the recommendations.
Models range from a one-size-fits-all course that doubles as a CS-0
class, to discipline-specific courses suitable for an IT minor taught
by non-CS departments. This workshop will include a quick review of
the "Being FIT" recommendations, followed by a description
of representative implementations and early experience.
Chair:
Larry Snyder (University of Washington)
Speakers:
Rick Adrion (UMass, Amherst)
Dorothy Deremer (Montclair State University)
Computer Science and the Humanities
This workshop will explore possibilities for collaboration
between computer scientists and scholars in the Humanities by presenting
several existing projects involving a variety of humanities disciplines.
These will show how sophisticated CS methodologies can be applied to
work in the humanities, and provide a basis for discussion of other
possibilities for collaboration.
Chair:
Nancy Ide (Vassar)
Speakers:
Peter Allen (Columbia University)
Sayeed Choudhury (Johns Hopkins University)
Trends in Research Funding II
This workshop will report on federal research funding
priorities and initiatives, with a focus on recent developments at NIH
and the Department of Homeland Security.
Chair:
Moshe Vardi (Rice University)
Speaker:
Eric Jakobsson (National Institutes of Health)
|
6:30 - 9:30 PM |
Dinner and State of the CRA Address
Speakers:
James Foley (CRA Board Chair; Georgia Institute of Technology)
Andrew Bernat (CRA Executive Director)
The CRA Distinguished Service and A. Nico Habermann
Awards will be presented.
CRA-Women
slides during awards presentation.
|
Tuesday, July 13
|
7:00 - 8:30 AM |
Breakfast Buffet |
PLENARY SESSION III
8:30 - 10:00 AM |
The Impact of IT on the US Economy
Recent research has confirmed that information technology
has been responsible for substantial increases in productivity and GDP
growth of the US economy (see the article at:
http://archive.cra.org/CRN/articles/sept03/king.html). The long-predicted
promise of IT seems to be coming true. This story has great potential
to help CS leaders connect the importance of CS education and research
to state and national welfare. In addition, lessons learned from the
past will provide direction for making the contributions of this community
even more valuable in the future. Unfortunately, the story is not well
known in the computer science community. In this talk, Professor Vijay
Gurbaxani of UC Irvine, one of the country's top experts in the economics
of information technology, will explain the story and its implications.
Chair:
John King (University of Michigan)
Speaker:
Vijay Gurbaxani (UC Irvine)
|
10:00 - 10:30 AM |
Break
|
Workshop III (four parallel sessions)
10:30 AM - Noon |
Diversity: What Works?
For a number of years, our discussions on diversity
have centered on determining barriers to successfully including more
women and minorities in computer science and engineering. It is now
time to focus on what really works. Because the problem of underrepresentation
of women and minorities is so critical, research, studies, and programmatic
projects have been addressing the challenges of full participation of
women and minorities in a number of ways. Finally, strategies and approaches
that are successful are beginning to appear. In this session, speakers
who are national leaders in this effort will describe their experience
with what works for increasing participation by underrepresented groups
in computer science. The goal of the session is to provide the participants
with concrete strategies that they can take back to their institutions
and implement to improve diversity.
Chair:
Lori Clarke (UMass)
Speakers:
Ann Q. Gates (University of Texas, El Paso)
John S. Hurley (The Boeing Co.)
Cynthia Lanius (Sinton ISD)
Telle Whitney (Institute for Women and Technology)
The Role of Research Faculty in an Academic Department
This session will address the following questions:
• What are appropriate criteria for appointment and promotion?
• What are appropriate evaluation and reward procedures in the absence
of tenure?
• What are the privileges and duties of research faculty?
• What can be done to provide a positive environment in which tenure-track
and research faculty interact?
Chairs:
Gerard Medioni (University of Southern California)
J
Strother Moore (University of Texas at Austin)
Panelists:
Larry Davis (University of Maryland)
Rangachar Kasturi (University of South Florida)
Marc Snir (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign)
Matt Mason (Carnegie Mellon University)
Expanding the Frontiers of Information Technology:
The Challenge to Academic Leadership
This workshop will feature a discussion of how IT (education)
needs to change so that much closer cooperation with domain expertise
can be obtained. IT has been expanding rapidly from its initial bases
of application in scientific calculation and administrative data processing
into virtually every field of human endeavor. Computer science and other
technical fields traditionally focused on the "supply side"
of technology, leaving the "demand side" issues of application
to others. The emerging situation requires much closer cooperation between
the supply side and the demand side. Technical experts must be able
to work with domain specialists. This workshop will address the broadening
cultural worldview of technical education, the range of disciplinary
perspectives that are required to meet this need, and the challenges
faced by leadership of technical academic programs as they attempt to
deal with cross-disciplinary programs. Particular focus will be on challenges
of evaluating academic performance, establishing coherent research and
instructional programs, and maintaining civil society among heterogeneous
faculty.
Chair:
John King (University of Michigan)
Speakers:
William Aspray (Indiana University)
Jim Foley (Georgia Institute of Technology)
Vijay Gurbaxani (UC Irvine)
The Future of Industrial Research Labs
Over the past decade, industrial research labs have
been changing the way they operate. These changes were accelerated by
the dot-com/communications/semiconductor crash. This workshop discusses
these changes and the trends pointing to further changes in the future.
Chair:
Dick Waters (MERL)
Speakers:
Jeff Jaffe (Lucent)
Alfred Spector (IBM)
David Tennenhouse (Intel)
|
Noon - 1:30 PM |
Luncheon
CRA Board Interaction with Conference Participants
|
Workshop IV (four parallel
sessions)
1:30 - 3:00 PM |
The Role of CS in Societal Applications
Societal applications—or applications that benefit a
group of people with common interests, beliefs, or professions—can significantly
benefit from computer science research results. Applications such as
literacy, energy resources, or a better quality of life for the elderly
can benefit from different computing technologies. This panel will include
three computer scientists who have applied different computing technologies
to address some societal issues. The panelists will present different
perspectives on the role of CS in societal applications.
Chair:
Valerie Taylor (Texas A&M University)
Panelists:
Ruzena Bajcsy (CITRIS, UC Berkeley)
Leah Jamieson (Purdue University)
Bryant York (Portland State University)
Accreditation of IT Programs
This session will explore current issues in the accreditation
of computing education. The first part of the session will be devoted
to recent issues related to traditional computer science and engineering
education. The session will also consider accreditation of other computing
disciplines such as information systems and the newly emerging programs
in information technology. Discussion topics will include the need for
multiple or alternate accreditation to that offered by ABET for programs
that are multidisciplinary.
Chair:
William Aspray (Indiana University)
Speakers:
Stuart Zweben (Ohio State), moderator
David Feinstein (University of South Alabama)
John King (University of Michigan)
Grand Challenges in Trustworthy Computing
This session will report on some of the results of CRA's
second Grand Research Challenges conference held in November 2003, and
discuss the long-term research issues related to secure computing.
Chair:
Eugene Spafford (Purdue University)
Speakers:
Rich DeMillo (Georgia Tech)
Eugene Spafford (Purdue University)
Jeannette Wing (Carnegie Mellon University)
Software Offshoring: Risks and Opportunities for Computing
Programs
Over the course of the last several years, there has
been a growing concern in the computing industry over the number of
jobs that have been lost to workers in India, China and, more recently,
in Southeast Asian and Eastern European countries. This has caught the
attention of political leaders who are worried about the future of an
industry that was once thought to be immune from offshoring and who
have raised the specter of legislation to protect jobs. This session
will try to assess the scope and scale of software offshoring. It will
also discuss the risks and opportunities that this trend will bring
to academic computing departments.
Chair:
Stephen Seidman (New Jersey Institute of Technology)
Speakers:
Alok Aggarwal (Evalueserve)
Larry Finkelstein (Northeastern University)
Stephen Seidman (New Jersey Institute of Technology)
|
3:00 - 9:00 PM |
Workshop for IT Deans
Chair:
Bobby Schnabel (University of Colorado, Boulder)
|
Wednesday, July 14 |
8:30 AM - Noon |
Workshop for IT Deans
Chair:
Bobby Schnabel (University of Colorado, Boulder)
|
|