Nancy M. Amato

Last updated
Nancy Amato
Born
Nancy Marie Amato

NationalityAmerican
Alma mater University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (PhD)
University of California, Berkeley (MS)
Stanford University (BS)
Known for Motion planning
Computational biology
Computational geometry
Parallel computing
Animation
Distributed computing
Parallel algorithms
Performance modeling and optimization
Awards IEEE Fellow (2010)
AAAI Fellow (2018)
ACM Fellow (2015)
Scientific career
Fields Computer Science
Institutions Texas A&M University
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Thesis Reversing trains : a turn of the century sorting problem  (1988)
Doctoral advisor Franco P. Preparata
Website cs.illinois.edu/directory/profile/namato
engineering.tamu.edu/cse/profiles/namato.html

Nancy Marie Amato is an American computer scientist noted for her research on the algorithmic foundations of motion planning, computational biology, computational geometry and parallel computing. [1] Amato is the Abel Bliss Professor of Engineering and Head of the Department of Computer Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. [2] Amato is noted for her leadership in broadening participation in computing, and is currently a member of the steering committee of CRA-WP (formerly known as CRA-W), of which she has been a member of the board since 2000.[ citation needed ]

Contents

Education

Amato received both a Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics and a Bachelor of Science degree in Mathematical Sciences from Stanford University in 1986. [2] She received an MS in Computer Science from the University of California, Berkeley in 1988, with advisor Manuel Blum. [3] In 1995, she received a PhD in computer science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign under advisor Franco P. Preparata for her thesis "Parallel Algorithms for Convex Hulls and Proximity Problems". [2]

Career and research

She joined the Department of Computer Science at Texas A&M University as an assistant professor in 1995. She was promoted to associate professor in 2000, to professor in 2004, and to Unocal professor in 2011.

In July 2018, Amato was named the next head of the Department of Computer Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, starting in January 2019. [4] [5]

Amato has several notable results. Her paper on probabilistic roadmap methods (PRMs) is one of the most important papers on PRM. It describes the first PRM variant that does not use uniform sampling in the robot's configuration space. [6] She wrote a seminal paper with one of her students that shows how the PRM methodology can be applied to protein motions, and in particular protein folding. This approach has opened up a new research area in computational biology. [7] This result opens up a rich new set of applications for this technique in computational biology. Another paper she wrote with her students represents a major advance by showing how global energy landscape statistics, such as relative folding rates and population kinetics, can be computed for proteins from the approximate landscapes computed by Amato's PRM-based method. [8] In another paper, she and a student introduced a novel technique, approximate convex decomposition (ACD), for partitioning a polyhedron into approximately convex pieces. [9] Amato also co-leads the STAPL project with her husband Lawrence Rauchwerger, who is also a computer scientist on the faculty at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.[ citation needed ] STAPL is a parallel C++ library. [10]

Awards and honors

Her notable awards include:

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Timothy M. Chan</span> Canadian computer scientist

Timothy Moon-Yew Chan is a Founder Professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. He was formerly Professor and University Research Chair in the David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science, University of Waterloo, Canada.

David J. Kuck, a graduate of the University of Michigan, was a professor in the Computer Science Department the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign from 1965 to 1993. He is the father of Olympic silver medalist Jonathan Kuck. While at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign he developed the Parafrase compiler system (1977), which was the first testbed for the development of automatic vectorization and related program transformations. In his role as Director (1986–93) of the Center for Supercomputing Research and Development (CSRD-UIUC), Kuck led the construction of the CEDAR project, a hierarchical shared-memory 32-processor SMP supercomputer completed in 1988 at the University of Illinois.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ayanna Howard</span> American roboticist

Ayanna MacCalla Howard is an American roboticist, entrepreneur and educator currently serving as the dean of the College of Engineering at Ohio State University. Assuming the post in March 2021, Howard became the first woman to lead the Ohio State College of Engineering.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Manuela M. Veloso</span> Portuguese-American computer scientist

Manuela Maria Veloso is the Head of J.P. Morgan AI Research & Herbert A. Simon University Professor Emeritus in the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University, where she was previously Head of the Machine Learning Department. She served as president of Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI) until 2014, and the co-founder and a Past President of the RoboCup Federation. She is a fellow of AAAI, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), and Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). She is an international expert in artificial intelligence and robotics.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bill Gropp</span>

William Douglas Gropp is the director of the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) and the Thomas M. Siebel Chair in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. He is also the founding Director of the Parallel Computing Institute. Gropp helped to create the Message Passing Interface, also known as MPI, and the Portable, Extensible Toolkit for Scientific Computation, also known as PETSc.

Marc Snir is an Israeli-American computer scientist. He holds a Michael Faiman and Saburo Muroga Professorship in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He currently pursues research in parallel computing. He was the principal investigator (PI) for the software of the petascale Blue Waters system and co-director of the Intel and Microsoft-funded Universal Parallel Computing Research Center (UPCRC).

Roberto Tamassia is an American Italian computer scientist, the Plastech Professor of Computer Science at Brown University, and served as the chair of the Brown Computer Science department from 2007 to 2014. His research specialty is in the design and analysis of algorithms for graph drawing, computational geometry, and computer security; he is also the author of several textbooks.

Dinesh Manocha is an Indian-American computer scientist and the Paul Chrisman Iribe Professor of Computer Science at University of Maryland College Park, formerly at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His research interests are in scientific computation, robotics, self-driving cars, affective computing, virtual and augmented reality and 3D computer graphics.

Ming C. Lin is an American computer scientist and a Barry Mersky and Capital One Endowed Professor at the University of Maryland, College Park, where she is also the former chair of the Department of Computer Science. Prior to moving to Maryland in 2018, Lin was the John R. & Louise S. Parker Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Ravishankar K. Iyer is the George and Ann Fisher Distinguished Professor of Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is a specialist in reliable and secure networks and systems.

Lydia E. Kavraki is a Greek-American computer scientist, the Noah Harding Professor of Computer Science, a professor of bioengineering, electrical and computer engineering, and mechanical engineering at Rice University. She is also the director of the Ken Kennedy Institute at Rice University. She is known for her work on robotics/AI and bioinformatics/computational biology and in particular for the probabilistic roadmap method for robot motion planning and biomolecular configuration analysis.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tandy Warnow</span> American computer scientist (active 1984–)

Tandy Warnow is an American computer scientist and Grainger Distinguished Chair in Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. She is known for her work on the reconstruction of evolutionary trees, both in biology and in historical linguistics, and also for multiple sequence alignment methods.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">University of Illinois Department of Computer Science</span>

The University of Illinois Department of Computer Science is the academic department encompassing the discipline of computer science at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. According to U.S. News & World Report, both its undergraduate and graduate programs rank in the top five among American universities, and according to Computer Science Open Rankings, the department ranks equally high in placing Ph.D. students in tenure-track positions at top universities and winning best paper awards. The department also ranks in the top two among all universities for faculty submissions to reputable journals and academic conferences, as determined by CSRankings.org. From before its official founding in 1964 to today, the department's faculty members and alumni have contributed to projects including the ORDVAC, PLATO, Mosaic, JavaScript and LLVM, and have founded companies including Siebel Systems, Netscape, Mozilla, PayPal, Yelp, YouTube, and Malwarebytes.

Lawrence Rauchwerger is an American computer scientist noted for his research in parallel computing, compilers, and computer architecture. He is a speaker in the ACM Distinguished Speakers Program and the deputy director of the Institute of Applied Mathematics and Computational Sciences at Texas A&M University. He is the co-director of the Parasol Lab and manages the lab's software and systems group.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Albert Zomaya</span> Computer engineer

Albert Y. Zomaya is currently the Chair Professor of High Performance Computing & Networking and Australian Research Council Professorial Fellow in the School of Information Technologies, The University of Sydney. He is also the Director of the Centre for Distributed and High Performance Computing. He is currently the Editor in Chief of IEEE Transactions on Sustainable Computing and Springer's Scalable Computing and Communications. He was past Editor in Chief of the IEEE Transactions on Computers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ahmed Sameh</span> American computer scientist

Ahmed Hamdy Mohamed Sameh is the Samuel D. Conte Professor of Computer Science at Purdue University. He is known for his contributions to parallel algorithms in numerical linear algebra.

Maria Gini is an Italian and American Computer Scientist in artificial intelligence and robotics. She has considerable service to the computer science artificial intelligence community and for broadening participation in computing. She was Chair of the ACM Special Interest Group in Artificial Intelligence SIGAI from 2003 to 2010. She is currently a member of the CRA-W board.

Raymond J. Mooney is an American computer scientist, professor of computer science, and director of the Artificial Intelligence laboratory at the University of Texas at Austin. His research focuses on machine learning and natural language processing.

Yixin Chen is a computer scientist, academic, and author. He is a professor of computer science and engineering at Washington University in St. Louis.

References

  1. Nancy M. Amato publications indexed by Google Scholar OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
  2. 1 2 3 "Nancy M. Amato". cs.illinois.edu/about/people/faculty/namato. Retrieved 2021-12-12.
  3. "Nancy Amato is first woman to lead UI computer science department". eecs.berkeley.edu. 25 July 2018. Retrieved 2020-05-31.
  4. "Nancy Amato Named Next Department Head of Computer Science" . Retrieved 13 Jul 2018.
  5. "Robotics expert to be first woman to lead UI computer-science department". 12 July 2018. Retrieved 13 Jul 2018.
  6. Nancy M. Amato; Osman B. Bayazit; Lucia K. Dale; Christopher Jones & Daniel Vallejo (1998). "OBPRM: An Obstacle-Based PRM for 3D Workspaces". Robotics: The Algorithmic Perspective (Selected Contributions of WAFR 1998): 155–168.
  7. Guang Song & Nancy M. Amato (2004). "A Motion Planning Approach to Folding: From Paper Craft to Protein Foldin". IEEE Transactions on Robotics and Automation: 60–71.
  8. Lydia Tapia; Xinyu Tang; Shawna Thomas & Nancy M. Amato (2007). "Kinetics Analysis Methods For Approximate Folding Landscapes". Bioinformatics. 23 (13): 539–548. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btm199 . PMID   17646341.
  9. Jyh-Ming Lien & Nancy M. Amato (2006). "Approximate Convex Decomposition of Polygons". Computational Geometry. 35 (1–2): 100–123. doi: 10.1016/j.comgeo.2005.10.005 .
  10. Gabriel Tanase, Antal Buss, Adam Fidel, Harshvardhan, Ioannis Papadopoulos, Olga Pearce, Timmie Smith, Nathan Thomas, Xiabing Xu, Nedhal Mourad, Jeremy Vu, Mauro Bianco, Nancy M. Amato, and Lawrence Rauchwerger (2011). "The STAPL Parallel Container Framework". In Proceedings of the ACM SIGPLAN Symposium of Principles and Practice of Parallel Programming (PPoPP): 235–246.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. "Elected AAAI Fellows". www.aaai.org.
  12. Association for Computing Machinery. "ACM Fellows Named for Computing Innovations that Are Advancing Technology in the Digital Age". ACM. Archived from the original on 2015-12-09. Retrieved 2015-12-08.
  13. Institute of Electronics and Electrical Engineering (2010). "Fellow Class of 2010". Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineering. Archived from the original on 2013-05-16. Retrieved 2013-04-28.
  14. Computing Research Association. "A. Nico Habermann Award". CRA. Retrieved 2014-02-28.
  15. American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) (2013-11-25). "AAAS Council Elects 388 New AAAS Fellows". AAS. Retrieved 2014-02-28.
  16. IEEE Education Society. "Hewlett-Packard/Harriett B. Rigas Award". IEEE. Retrieved 2014-02-28.
  17. Association for Computing Machinery (2012-12-18). "ACM Recognizes Distinguished Members for Computing Advances that Sustain Competitiveness - 2012 Recipients Embody the Rewards of Participation in the Computing Community". ACM. Archived from the original on 2014-03-04. Retrieved 2014-02-28.