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Received three-year NSF research grant on imperative Deep Learning program robustness and evolution as PI

I am pleased to announce that I, along with co-PI Anita Raja, have received a three-year standard research grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) Software & Hardware Foundations (SHF) program as principal investigator (PI) for a project entitled “Practical Analyses and Safe Transformations for Imperative Deep Learning Programs.” The total grant amount is $600K.

The project will facilitate the robustness and automated evolution and maintenance of large, industrial Deep Learning (DL) software systems that use imperative style programming. More information may be found on NSF’s website; stay tuned for more details and funded research opportunities!

Invited to participate on 2022 NSF panel

I am very honored to be invited to serve on a 2022 National Science Foundation (NSF) panel.

Invited to participate on 2021 NSF panel

I am honored to be invited to serve as a reviewer for a 2021 National Science Foundation (NSF) panel.

Invited to participate on 2020 NSF GRFP panel

I am honored to be invited to serve as a reviewer for the 2020 National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP).

 

Invited to participate on 2019 NSF panel

I am very honored to be invited to serve on a 2019 National Science Foundation (NSF) panel.

Received NSF ICSE 2018 Travel Award

I am pleased to announce that I have received a NSF ICSE 2018 Travel Award to attend the International Conference of Software Engineering (ICSE) in Gothenburg, Sweden next month.

ICSE is the premier software engineering conference, providing a forum for researchers, practitioners and educators to present and discuss the most recent innovations, trends, experiences and concerns in the field of software engineering.

Source: Travel and participation support – * ICSE 2018 *

Received NSF ICSE 2016 Travel Award

I am pleased to announce that I have received a NSF ICSE 2016 Travel Award to attend the International Conference of Software Engineering (ICSE) in Austin, TX later this month.

ICSE is the premier software engineering conference, providing a forum for researchers, practitioners and educators to present and discuss the most recent innovations, trends, experiences and concerns in the field of software engineering.

Source: ICSE 2016 Austin :: Financial Support for Participating in ICSE 2016

Md. wins SPLASH 2015 NSF Student Travel Support

Congrats to @mdarefin for winning a NSF Student Travel Support award to attend the SPLASH 2015 conference!

The US National Science Foundation has provided funding to support student attendance at SPLASH 2015. Applicants must be registered students at accredited US academic institutions. Successful applicants will be reimbursed for approved expenses, including conference student registration, travel, accommodation, and reasonable meal expenses. All reimbursements will require original receipts. Support from NSF is provided through Grant CCF-1549774.

Source: Students – SPLASH 2015

Call for Applications: LSAMP Spring 2016

The LSAMP program is now accepting applications for Spring 2016. Accepted students will receive up to $5000 to conduct research with a faculty mentor during the Spring 2016 semester and beyond. The deadline to apply is December 14, 2015. If you are interested in applying with myself as a faculty mentor, please complete my informational form. More information is listed below:

The LSAMP program is a NSF funded program that has the objective of increasing the numbers of minority students graduating with degrees in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) fields. The program does this by giving eligible students a stipend and training as they work alongside a CUNY faculty mentor on a research project.

Eligibility and application instructions can be found on the attached pdf file but I still wanted to go over some important steps:

  1. Find a faculty mentor doing research. A list of such faculty mentors can be found here.
  2. Have the mentor agree to take you on in their lab for a research project (spanning 2 months for the summer).
  3. Create a research project with your mentor or work on a project your mentor is currently working on.
  4. Fill out and submit your application.
  5. Send in supporting documents (scanned) to ampcc@ccny.cuny.edu and CC mbennett@citytech.cuny.edu: Updated Transcript, Resume, Birth certificate, Passport or Green Card, Social Security Card.

You will be notified via mail of acceptance.

Please Note: If are interested in applying but do not currently have a mentor, please submit the Phase I application and leave the mentor information and project details parts blank. Once you have confirmed a project mentor and project, they must email the LSAMP office with their project title, project description, mentor’s name, and mentor’s email address. The mentor will then be manually sent the Mentor Endorsement link.

The for applications for Spring 2016 is December 14, 2015. So please be swift!

If you have any other questions do not hesitate to contact Marvin Bennett,  NYCCT AMP Coordinator, mbennett@citytech.cuny.edu, P616, Thurs. 9am-5pm, V806 Weds. 9am-5pm, Phone: 718-260-5529, Fax: 718-260-5524.

Olivia wins 2015-2016 NSF LSAMP award

Congrats to @oamoore for being awarded a 2015-2016 NSF LSAMP research fellowship!