http:^^www.cs.umd.edu^~saltz^
来自「This data set contains WWW-pages collect」· EDU^~SALTZ^ 代码 · 共 141 行
EDU^~SALTZ^
141 行
Date: Thu, 21 Nov 1996 20:27:47 GMT
Server: Apache-SSL/0.4.3b
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Content-length: 5599
Last-modified: Fri, 08 Nov 1996 16:09:43 GMT
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN"><HTML><HEAD> <TITLE>Joel Saltz</TITLE> <META NAME="GENERATOR" CONTENT="Mozilla/3.0Gold (X11; I; SunOS 4.1.3 sun4c) [Netscape]"></HEAD><BODY TEXT="#000000" LINK="#0000FF" VLINK="#000080" ALINK="#FF0000" BACKGROUND="http://www.cs.umd.edu/Images/White_Granite_Background.gif"><H1 ALIGN=CENTER>Joel Saltz</H1><P> <!WA0><IMG SRC="http://www.cs.umd.edu/~saltz/joeldarker.JPG" HEIGHT=246 WIDTH=170 ALIGN=LEFT><B>CurrentPosition:</B> Associate Professor, Computer Science</P><P> Joint Appointment<!WA1><A HREF="http://www.cs.umd.edu"> :Department of ComputerScience</A></P><P><!WA2><A HREF="http://www.umiacs.edu">University of Maryland Institute forAdvanced Computer Studies (UMIACS) </A></P><P><B>Academic Degrees:</B> M.D., Ph.D., <!WA3><A HREF="http://www.duke.edu">DukeUniversity</A>, 1986. </P><P><!WA4><A HREF="http://www.cs.umd.edu/users/saltz/cv/">View</A> my current<B>CV</B> </P><P><!WA5><A HREF="http://www.cs.umd.edu/users/saltz/cv.ps.Z">Download</A> my current <B>CV</B> Compressed Postscript</P><P><HR></P><H2>E-mail:</H2><P>saltz@hyena.cs.umd.edu Click <!WA6><A HREF="http://www.cs.umd.edu/cgi-bin/finger?saltz@cs.umd.edu">here</A>to finger. </P><H2>Address/Phone:</H2><P><!WA7><A HREF="http://www.cs.umd.edu">Department of Computer Science</A></P><P>A.V. Williams Building</P><P>University of Maryland</P><DT> College Park, MD 20742 USA</DT><DT> Office Phone : (301) 405-2669</DT><P> </P><H2>Research Coordinator: </H2><P><!WA8><A HREF="http://www.cs.umd.edu/users/andrea">Andrea Busada</A></P><DT> Email:<!WA9><A HREF="http://www.cs.umd.edu/users/andrea"> andrea@cs.umd.edu</A></DT><DT> Phone: 301-405-2729</DT><DT> </DT><P><HR></P><P> </P><H2 ALIGN=CENTER>Research Interests:</H2><CENTER><P><B>Distributed and Parallel Systems</B></P></CENTER><CENTER><P> <!WA10><A HREF="http://www.cs.umd.edu/projects/hpsl.html"><!WA11><IMG SRC="http://www.cs.umd.edu/~saltz/smglass.gif" </A HEIGHT=51 WIDTH=234></A><!WA12><A HREF="http://www.cs.umd.edu/projects/hpsl.html"></A></P></CENTER><P>Leads a research group at the University of Maryland College Park thathas developed methods that are making it possible to produce portable compilersand tools to map a broad range of challenging applications on high performancearchitectures. A major focus of this work is to develop techniques forirregular scientific problems, i.e. problems that are unstructured, sparseadaptive or block structured. This group works extensively with applicationsscientists in biomedicine, computational chemistry, computational aerospaceand computational physics, and with parallel compiler vendors. Many ofthe concepts first described and prototyped by this project are makingtheir way to High Performance Fortran during the ongoing second round oflanguage definition. This work has also led to the development of runtimesupport (meta-CHAOS) to couple runtime support libraries used in data andtask parallel compilers. Meta-CHAOS is a central component of the ParallelCompiler Runtime Consortium. </P><P>Currently developing techniques that will allow parallel compute anddata servers to offer their services to remote clients. The goal is todevelop techniques that will make it possible to compose programs thatexecute on any combination of distributed memory, shared memory or networkedmicrocomputers or workstations. We are motivating this research by twocategories of applications. The first category is sensor data processingand data fusion, and the second category is complex biomedical and physicalsimulations. We have developed early prototype software able to coupleseveral independent data parallel programs. Our prototypes are able tocouple separately executing High Performance FORTRAN programs, and to coupleHigh Performance FORTRAN programs with parallel applications developedusing the Maryland CHAOS and Block Parti libraries. </P><P>This computer science research program has been motivated by collaborationswith biomedical, physical and earth scientists. Recent collaborations withbiomedical scientists have included work with NIH researchers who focuson problems associated with molecular dynamics, protein folding, and radiationtreatment planning. Recent work with physical scientists has included collaborationswith researchers investigating computational aerospace, and computationalcombustion. Current environmental science collaborators are focusing onproblems associated with the use of remote sensor data sources to characterizethe Earth's land cover and to quantify the earth's carbonbalance. </P><P>I am now expanding my group's research to focus to the application ofnew ideas in systems software research to problems that arise in clinicalsettings. In one set of projects, we will develop embedded systems thatare able to provide feedback and suggestions on patient care issues bymonitoring medical data from a variety of sources (e.g. a Clinical Laboratorydatabase, a Pharmacy database , sources of archived clinical data and themain hospital database). In another set of projects, we will provide softwaretools that can be used to facilitate large scale epidemiological and healthservice research studies. We will develop tools for producing large aggregateddatasets from multiple data sources. These projects will be built usingsoftware developed (or modified) in the course of our ongoing researchin distributed computing. Our new clinical projects will, in turn, be fedback into our systems software research to improve the quality and thegenerality of the tools we build. </P><CENTER><P> </P></CENTER><CENTER><P> </P></CENTER></BODY></HTML>
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