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Notkin
Bobblehead (thanks to Owen Astrachan!) |
My educational and research interests are in software
engineering, with a particular focus in software evolution — understanding
why software is so hard and expensive to change, and in turn reducing those
difficulties and costs.
I've been on the faculty at the University of Washington in the Department of Computer Science & Engineering since 1984, currently serving as the Bradley Chair. I previously served as department chair (2001-06). I received my Sc.B. from Brown University (1977), and my Ph.D. from Carnegie-Mellon University (1984). I received an NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award (1988), was named an ACM Fellow (1998) and an IEEE Fellow (2008) and received the University of Washington Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award (2000). I've spent my sabbaticals at IBM's Haifa Research Lab, Osaka University, the Tokyo Institute of Technology, and most recently at Lund University. I served as chair of ACM SIGSOFT (1997-2001), as program chair of the 1993 ACM SIGSOFT Symposium on the Foundations of Software Engineering and as program co-chair of the 1995 International Conference on Software Engineering. I'm a member of the board of the CRA, and I am the past co-chair of the National Center for Women in Information Technology (NCWIT) Academic Alliance.
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