Berna Massingill

Timothy G. Mattson is Intel's industry manager for life sciences. His research focuses on technologies that simplify parallel computing for general programmers, with an emphasis on computational biology. He holds a Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Beverly A. Sanders is associate professor at the Department of Computer and Information Science and Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville. Her research focuses on techniques to help programmers construct high-quality, correct programs, including formal methods, component systems, and design patterns. She holds a Ph.D. in applied mathematics from Harvard University.

Berna L. Massingill is assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science at Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas. Her research interests include parallel and distributed computing, design patterns, and formal methods. She holds a Ph.D. in computer science from the California Institute of Technology.


Berna Massingill

Timothy G. Mattson is Intel's industry manager for life sciences. His research focuses on technologies that simplify parallel computing for general programmers, with an emphasis on computational biology. He holds a Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Beverly A. Sanders is associate professor at the Department of Computer and Information Science and Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville. Her research focuses on techniques to help programmers construct high-quality, correct programs, including formal methods, component systems, and design patterns. She holds a Ph.D. in applied mathematics from Harvard University.

Berna L. Massingill is assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science at Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas. Her research interests include parallel and distributed computing, design patterns, and formal methods. She holds a Ph.D. in computer science from the California Institute of Technology.



0321228111AB08232004

Timothy G. Mattson

Aaftab Munshi is the spec editor for the OpenGL ES 1.1, OpenGL ES 2.0, and OpenCL specifications and coauthor of the book OpenGL ES 2.0 Programming Guide (with Dan Ginsburg and Dave Shreiner, published by Addison-Wesley, 2008). He currently works at Apple.

 

Benedict R. Gaster is a software architect working on programming models for next-generation heterogeneous processors, in particular looking at high-level abstractions for parallel programming on the emerging class of processors that contain both CPUs and accelerators such as GPUs. Benedict has contributed extensively to the OpenCL’s design and has represented AMD at the Khronos Group open standard consortium. Benedict has a Ph.D. in computer science for his work on type systems for extensible records and variants. He has been working at AMD since 2008.

 

Timothy G. Mattson is an old-fashioned parallel programmer, having started in the mid-eighties with the Caltech Cosmic Cube and continuing to the present. Along the way, he has worked with most classes of parallel computers (vector supercomputers, SMP, VLIW, NUMA, MPP, clusters, and many-core processors). Tim has published extensively, including the books Patterns for Parallel Programming (with Beverly Sanders and Berna Massingill, published by Addison-Wesley, 2004) and An Introduction to Concurrency in Programming Languages (with Matthew J. Sottile and Craig E. Rasmussen, published by CRC Press, 2009). Tim has a Ph.D. in chemistry for his work on molecular scattering theory. He has been working at Intel since 1993.

 

James Fung has been developing computer vision on the GPU as it progressed from graphics to general-purpose computation. James has a Ph.D. in electrical and computer engineering from the University of Toronto and numerous IEEE and ACM publications in the areas of parallel GPU Computer Vision and Mediated Reality. He is currently a Developer Technology Engineer at NVIDIA, where he examines computer vision and image processing on graphics hardware.

 

Dan Ginsburg currently works at Children’s Hospital Boston as a Principal Software Architect in the Fetal-Neonatal Neuroimaging and Development Science Center, where he uses OpenCL for accelerating neuroimaging algorithms. Previously, he worked for Still River Systems developing GPU-accelerated image registration software for the Monarch 250 proton beam radiotherapy system. Dan was also Senior Member of Technical Staff at AMD, where he worked for over eight years in a variety of roles, including developing OpenGL drivers, creating desktop and hand-held 3D demos, and leading the development of handheld GPU developer tools. Dan holds a B.S. in computer science from Worcester Polytechnic Institute and an M.B.A. from Bentley University.

Timothy G. Mattson

Timothy G. Mattson is Senior Research Scientist at Intel's Computational Software Laboratory in Hillsboro, OR, where he develops technologies that simplify parallel computing for general programmers. He holds a Ph.D. in Chemistry from University of California, Santa Cruz.

Beverly A. Sanders is Associate Professor at the Department of Computer and Information Science and Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville. Her research interests include formal methods, component systems, and design patterns for parallel programs.

Berna Massingill is Assistant Professor in the Department of Computer Science at Trinity University, San Antonio, TX. Her research interests include parallel and distributed computing, design patterns, and formal methods. She holds a Ph.D. from the California Institute of Technology.



Beverly Sanders

Timothy G. Mattson is Intel's industry manager for life sciences. His research focuses on technologies that simplify parallel computing for general programmers, with an emphasis on computational biology. He holds a Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Beverly A. Sanders is associate professor at the Department of Computer and Information Science and Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville. Her research focuses on techniques to help programmers construct high-quality, correct programs, including formal methods, component systems, and design patterns. She holds a Ph.D. in applied mathematics from Harvard University.

Berna L. Massingill is assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science at Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas. Her research interests include parallel and distributed computing, design patterns, and formal methods. She holds a Ph.D. in computer science from the California Institute of Technology.



0321228111AB08232004

Beverly Sanders

Timothy G. Mattson is Intel's industry manager for life sciences. His research focuses on technologies that simplify parallel computing for general programmers, with an emphasis on computational biology. He holds a Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Beverly A. Sanders is associate professor at the Department of Computer and Information Science and Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville. Her research focuses on techniques to help programmers construct high-quality, correct programs, including formal methods, component systems, and design patterns. She holds a Ph.D. in applied mathematics from Harvard University.

Berna L. Massingill is assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science at Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas. Her research interests include parallel and distributed computing, design patterns, and formal methods. She holds a Ph.D. in computer science from the California Institute of Technology.



0321228111AB08232004