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July 29, 2016

2016 ACM SIGHPC/Intel Computational and Data Science Fellowship Winners Announced

July 29 — As the inaugural Fellowship class, the 2016-2017 cohort of fellowship winners is a very exciting group for us. The quality and range of disciplines and life experiences represented in this group of outstanding students is truly astonishing.

Students were nominated by their graduate advisors, and nominees spanned 21 disciplines and represented large, mid-sized, and small institutions in 23 countries. 80% of nominees were female, and 20% were identified as an underrepresented racial or ethnic minority in their country of study. The nominations were evaluated and ranked by a panel of 18 experts (who were themselves diverse with respect to race, gender, discipline, and nationality) based on nominees’ overall potential for excellence in data science and/or computational science, and the extent to which they will help to increase diversity in the workplace.

Of the 14 students named as winners this year, twelve are women and four are underrepresented minorities in their country of study. They are pursuing MS and PhD degrees not just in computer science, but also in a variety of applied fields:

  • Courtney Armour, PhD candidate, Bioinformatics, Oregon State University
  • Michael Barrow, PhD candidate, Computer Science, University of California San Diego
  • Monica Chelliah, MS candidate, Scientific Computing, University of Cambridge
  • Dimah Dera, PhD candidate, Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, Rowan University
  • Cylita Guy, PhD candidate, Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto
  • Samniqueka Halsey, PhD candidate, Ecology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Deborah Hanus, PhD candidate, Computer Science, Harvard University
  • Jaye Harada, PhD candidate, Materials Science & Engineering, Northwestern University
  • Irish Medina, MS candidate, Computer Science, University of Waterloo
  • Heather Peacock, PhD candidate, Geography, Western University
  • Tahiry Rajaonarison, PhD candidate, Geodesy and Tectonophysics, Virginia Polytechnic and State University
  • Meena Subramaniam, PhD candidate, Bioinformatics, University of California, San Francisco
  • Victoria Tolls, MS candidate, Biomedical Informatics, Queen’s University
  • Anna Wright, PhD candidate, Astrophysics, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey

Funding will be awarded in August. The winners will receive travel support to the SC16 conference in Salt Lake City, Utah (USA), where they will be recognized at an awards ceremony. They will also receive a complimentary membership in SIGHPC for the duration of their fellowship.

“Investments such as this one are critical in creating long-term change in the demographics of the computing workforce,” explains Cherri Pancake, Vice President of ACM and professor and Intel Faculty Fellow in EECS at Oregon State University. “Efforts to raise awareness, to educate organizational leadership about the business case for diversity, and to raise interest among possible students are all necessary components of change, but they only take life with investment. We are incredibly grateful to Intel for their leadership, and to ACM for the commitment and dedication they’ve shown in making these fellowships a reality.”

“As an industry that values innovation and different perspectives, improving diversity in the HPC ecosystem will not only open up exciting careers to talented women and under-represented populations, but will also bring alternative perspectives to solve some of society’s greatest challenges,” said Hugo Saleh, director of marketing, High Performance Computing Platform Group at Intel Corporation. “Through this fellowship, ACM SIGHPC and Intel are building a stronger and more inclusive HPC community. We’re encouraged by the progress made so far and look forward to the impact that these new data and computational scientists will make on the HPC ecosystem.”

About the ACM SIGHPC/Intel Computational and Data Science Fellowship

The fellowship was established to increase the diversity of students pursuing graduate degrees in data science and computational science, including women as well as students from racial/ethnic backgrounds that have not traditionally participated in the computing field. The program supports students pursuing Master’s, PhD, or equivalent degrees at institutions anywhere in the world and who have completed less than half of their planned program of study. Fellowships are renewable for up to five years. Find more information at sighpc.org/fellowships.

About SIGHPC

The ACM Special Interest Group on HPC is the first international group within a major professional society that is devoted exclusively to the needs of students, faculty, and practitioners in high performance computing. SIGHPC’s mission is to help spread the use of HPC, help raise the standards of the profession, and help ensure a rich and rewarding career for people involved in the field. Find out more at www.sighpc.org/about.


Source: ACM SIGHPC

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