ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award

Last updated
ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award
Awarded forBest doctoral dissertations in computer science and computer engineering
Presented by Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Reward(s)US $20,000
First awarded1978
Website awards.acm.org/doctoral-dissertation

The ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award is awarded annually by the Association for Computing Machinery to the authors of the best doctoral dissertations in computer science and computer engineering. The award is accompanied by a prize of US$20,000 and winning dissertations are published in the ACM Digital Library. [1] Honorable mentions are awarded $10,000. Financial support is provided by Google. The number of awarded dissertations may vary year-to-year.

Contents

ACM also awards the ACM India Doctoral Dissertation Award. [2] Several Special Interest Groups (SIGs) award a Doctoral Dissertation Award. [3]

Recipients

YearWinnerHonorable Mention
or Series Winner
1978Joseph Urban [4]
Roderic G. Cattell [5]
1980Douglas Cook [6]
Jacob Slonim [7]
Lawrence Larson [8]
Ruth E. Davis [9]
1982 Charles E. Leiserson [10]
1983 Thomas W. Reps [11] Ellen Hildreth [12]
Steven Johnson [13]
1984Manolis G.H. Katevenis [14] Eric Bach [15]
Henry Baird [16]
James Korein [17]
1985John R. Ellis [18] Ben-Zion Chor [19]
Danny Hillis [20]
1986 Johan Håstad [21] Carl Ebeling [22]
Ketan Mulmuley [23] David Ungar [24]
1987 John Canny [25] Leslie Greengard [26]
Marc H. Brown [27]
1988Mauricio Karchmer [28] Anne Condon [29]
David L. Dill [30]
1989Vijay Saraswat [31] Joe Killian [32]
Michael Kearns [33]
1990David Heckerman [34] Noam Nisan [35]
Hector Geffner [36]
1991 Robert Schapire [37] Asit Dan [38]
Carsten Lund [39]
Garth Gibson [40]
1992Kenneth McMillan [41]
Mendel Rosenblum [42]
1993 Madhu Sudan [43] James J. Kistler [44]
Pandu Nayak [45]
1994 David Karger [46]
T.V. Raman [47]
1995 Daniel Spielman [48]
Sanjeev Arora [49]
1996Carl Waldspurger [50]
Xiaoyuan Tu [51]
1997Steven R. McCanne [52]
1998 Hari Balakrishnan [53]
1999Dieter van Melkebeek [54]
2000 Salil Vadhan [55] Michael D. Ernst [56]
William Chan [57]
2001 Ion Stoica [58] David A. Wagner [59]
Robert O'Callahan [60]
2002 Venkatesan Guruswami [61] Robert C. Miller [62]
Tim Roughgarden [63]
2003AnHai Doan [64] Dina Katabi [65]
Subhash Khot [66]
2004 Boaz Barak [67] Emmett Witchel [68]
Ramesh Johari [69]
2005Ben Liblit [70] Olivier Dousse [71]
2006 Ren Ng [72] [73] Aseem Agarwala [74]
2007Sergey Yekhanin [75] Benny Applebaum [76]
Vincent Conitzer [77]
Yan Liu [78]
2008 Constantinos Daskalakis [79] [80] Derek Hoiem [81]
Sachin Katti [82]
2009 Craig Gentry [83] Andre Platzer [84]
Haryadi S Gunawi [85]
Keith Noah Snavely [86]
2010Bryan Parno [87] Benjamin Snyder [88]
2011Seth Cooper [89] [90] Aleksander Madry [91]
David Steurer [92]
2012 Shyamnath Gollakota [93] Gregory Valiant [94]
Peter Hawkins [95]
2013Sanjam Garg [96] Grey Ballard [97]
Shayan Oveis Gharan [98]
2014 Matei Zaharia [99] [100] John C. Duchi [101]
John Criswell [102]
2015Julian Shun [103] [104] Aaron Sidford [105] [106]
Siavash Mirarab [107] [108]
2016Haitham Hassanieh [109] [110] Peter Bailis [111]
Veselin Raychev [112]
2017Aviad Rubinstein [113] Mohsen Ghaffari [114]
Stefanie Mueller [115]
2018 Chelsea Finn [116] Ryan Beckett [117]
Tengyu Ma [118]
2019Dor Minzer [119] Jakub Tarnawski [120]
Jiajun Wu [121]
2020Chuchu Fan [122] Henry Corrigan-Gibbs [123]
Ralf Jung [124]

See also

Related Research Articles

The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) is a US-based international learned society for computing. It was founded in 1947 and is the world's largest scientific and educational computing society. The ACM is a non-profit professional membership group, reporting nearly 110,000 student and professional members as of 2022. Its headquarters are in New York City.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shafi Goldwasser</span> Israeli American computer scientist

Shafrira Goldwasser is an Israeli-American computer scientist and winner of the Turing Award in 2012. She is the RSA Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology; a professor of mathematical sciences at the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel; the director of the Simons Institute for the Theory of Computing at the University of California, Berkeley; and co-founder and chief scientist of Duality Technologies.

Johan Torkel Håstad is a Swedish theoretical computer scientist most known for his work on computational complexity theory. He was the recipient of the Gödel Prize in 1994 and 2011 and the ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award in 1986, among other prizes. He has been a professor in theoretical computer science at KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden since 1988, becoming a full professor in 1992. He is a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences since 2001.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Silvio Micali</span> Italian-American computer scientist (born 1954)

Silvio Micali is an Italian computer scientist, professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the founder of Algorand, a proof-of-stake blockchain cryptocurrency protocol. Micali's research at the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory centers on cryptography and information security.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Charles E. Leiserson</span> American computer scientist

Charles Eric Leiserson is a computer scientist and professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.). He specializes in the theory of parallel computing and distributed computing.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eric Brewer (scientist)</span>

Eric Allen Brewer is professor emeritus of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley and vice-president of infrastructure at Google. His research interests include operating systems and distributed computing. He is known for formulating the CAP theorem about distributed network applications in the late 1990s.

Robert Elias Schapire is an American computer scientist, former David M. Siegel '83 Professor in the computer science department at Princeton University, and has recently moved to Microsoft Research. His primary specialty is theoretical and applied machine learning.

Gul Agha is a professor of computer science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and director of the Open Systems Laboratory. He is known for his work on the actor model of concurrent computation, and was also Editor-in-Chief of ACM Computing Surveys from 1999 to 2007. Agha was born and completed his early schooling in Sindh, Pakistan. Agha completed his B.S. with honors at the California Institute of Technology in the year 1977. He received his Ph.D. in Computer and Communication Science from the University of Michigan in 1986 under the supervision of John Holland. However, much of his doctoral research was carried out in Carl Hewitt's Message-Passing Semantics Group at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Agha's dissertation was published by the MIT Press as Actors: a model of concurrent computation in distributed systems, a book which, according to the ACM Guide to Computing Literature, has been cited over 3000 times.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Canny</span> Australian computer scientist

John F. Canny is an Australian computer scientist, and Paul E Jacobs and Stacy Jacobs Distinguished Professor of Engineering in the Computer Science Department of the University of California, Berkeley. He has made significant contributions in various areas of computer science and mathematics, including artificial intelligence, robotics, computer graphics, human-computer interaction, computer security, computational algebra, and computational geometry.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Constantinos Daskalakis</span> Greek computer scientist

Constantinos Daskalakis is a Greek theoretical computer scientist. He is a professor at MIT's Electrical Engineering and Computer Science department and a member of the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. He was awarded the Rolf Nevanlinna Prize and the Grace Murray Hopper Award in 2018.

Hari Balakrishnan is the Fujitsu Professor of Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT, and the Co-founder and CTO at Cambridge Mobile Telematics.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ion Stoica</span> Romanian–American computer scientist

Ion Stoica is a Romanian–American computer scientist specializing in distributed systems, cloud computing and computer networking. He is a professor of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley and co-director of AMPLab. He co-founded Conviva and Databricks with other original developers of Apache Spark.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tim Roughgarden</span> American computer scientist

Timothy Avelin Roughgarden is an American computer scientist and a professor of Computer Science at Columbia University. Roughgarden's work deals primarily with game theoretic questions in computer science.

William Eric Leifur Grimson is a Canadian-born computer scientist and professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he served as Chancellor from 2011 to 2014. An expert in computer vision, he headed MIT's Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from 2005 to 2011 and currently serves as its Chancellor for Academic Advancement.

Michael Justin Kearns is an American computer scientist, professor and National Center Chair at the University of Pennsylvania, the founding director of Penn's Singh Program in Networked & Social Systems Engineering (NETS), the founding director of Warren Center for Network and Data Sciences, and also holds secondary appointments in Penn's Wharton School and department of Economics. He is a leading researcher in computational learning theory and algorithmic game theory, and interested in machine learning, artificial intelligence, computational finance, algorithmic trading, computational social science and social networks. He previously led the Advisory and Research function in Morgan Stanley's Artificial Intelligence Center of Excellence team, and is currently an Amazon Scholar within Amazon Web Services.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Valerie Taylor (computer scientist)</span> American computer scientist

Valerie Elaine Taylor is an American computer scientist who is the director of the Mathematics and Computer Science Division of Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois. Her research includes topics such as performance analysis, power analysis, and resiliency. She is known for her work on "Prophesy," described as "a database used to collect and analyze data to predict the performance on different applications on parallel systems."

Sylvia Ratnasamy is a Belgian–Indian computer scientist. She is best known as one of the inventors of the distributed hash table (DHT). Her doctoral dissertation proposed the content-addressable networks, one of the original DHTs, and she received the ACM Grace Murray Hopper Award in 2014 for this work. She is currently a professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">ACM SIGOPS</span> ACMs Special Interest Group on Operating Systems

ACM SIGOPS is the Association for Computing Machinery's Special Interest Group on Operating Systems, an international community of students, faculty, researchers, and practitioners associated with research and development related to operating systems. The organization sponsors international conferences related to computer systems, operating systems, computer architectures, distributed computing, and virtual environments. In addition, the organization offers multiple awards recognizing outstanding participants in the field, including the Dennis M. Ritchie Doctoral Dissertation Award, in honor of Dennis Ritchie, co-creator of the C programming language and Unix operating system.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Yael Tauman Kalai</span> Cryptographer and theoretical computer scientist

Yael Tauman Kalai is a cryptographer and theoretical computer scientist who works as a Senior Principal Researcher at Microsoft Research New England and as an adjunct professor at MIT in the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab.

Daniel Abadi is the Darnell-Kanal Professor of Computer Science at University of Maryland, College Park. His primary area of research is database systems, with contributions to stream databases, distributed databases, graph databases, and column-store databases. He helped create C-Store, a column-oriented database, and HadoopDB, a hybrid of relational databases and Hadoop. Both database systems were commercialized by companies.

References

  1. "About ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award". awards.acm.org.
  2. "About ACM India Doctoral Dissertation Award". awards.acm.org. Retrieved 2018-04-05.
  3. "Special Interest Group (SIG) Awards". awards.acm.org. Retrieved 2018-04-05.
  4. "Joseph Urban". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  5. "Roderic G. Cattell". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  6. "Douglas Cook". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  7. "Jacob Slonim". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  8. "Lawrence Edwin Larson". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  9. "Ruth E. Davis". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  10. "Professor Charles E Leiserson". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  11. "Thomas Reps". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  12. "Ellen Hildreth". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  13. "Steven Johnson". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  14. "Manolis G.H. Katevenis". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  15. "Carl E. Bach". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  16. "Henry Baird". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  17. "James Korein". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  18. "John R. Ellis". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  19. "Ben-Zion Chor". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  20. "William Daniel Hillis". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  21. "Johan Torkel Hastad". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  22. "Carl Ebeling". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  23. "Ketan D. Mulmuley". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  24. "David M Ungar". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  25. "John Canny". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  26. "Leslie Greengard". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  27. "Marc H. Brown". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  28. "Mauricio Karchmer". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  29. "Anne Condon". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  30. "David Dill". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  31. "Vijay Saraswat". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  32. "Joe Killian". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  33. "Michael J. Kearns". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  34. "David Heckerman". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  35. "Noam Nissan". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  36. "Hector Geffner". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  37. "Robert Schapire". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  38. "Asit Dan". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  39. "Carsten Lund". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  40. "Garth A Gibson". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  41. "Kenneth McMillan". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  42. "Mendel Rosenblum". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  43. "Madhu Sudan". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  44. "James J. Kistler". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  45. "Pandu Nayak". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  46. "David Karger". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  47. "T.V. Raman". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  48. "Daniel A Spielman". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  49. "Sanjeev Arora". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  50. "Carl Waldspurger". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  51. "Xiaoyuan Tu". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  52. "Steven R. McCanne". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  53. "Hari Balakrishnan". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  54. "Dieter van Melkebeek". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  55. "Salil P Vadhan". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  56. "Michael D. Ernst". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  57. "William Chan". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  58. "Ion Stoica". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  59. "David Wagner". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  60. "Robert O'Callahan". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  61. "Venkatesan Guruswami". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  62. "Tim Roughgarden". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  63. "Tim Roughgarden". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  64. "AnHai Doan". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  65. "Dina Katabi". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  66. "Subhash Khot". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  67. "Boaz Barak". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  68. "Emmett Witchel". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  69. "Ramesh Johari". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  70. "Ben Liblit". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  71. "Olivier Dousse". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  72. "Yi-Ren Ng". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  73. Bonnington, Christina. "Ren Ng Shares His Photographic Vision: Shoot Now, Focus Later". WIRED. Retrieved 2018-04-20.
  74. "6170948 Aseem Agarwala". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  75. "Sergey Yekhanin". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  76. "Benny Applebaum". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  77. "Vincent Conitzer". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  78. "Yan Liu". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  79. "Constantinos Daskalakis". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  80. "Greek MIT professor who solved "Nash Puzzle" sad over brain drain | TornosNews.gr". TornosNews.GR (in Greek). Retrieved 2018-04-20.
  81. "Derek Hoiem". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  82. "Sachin Katti". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  83. "Craig Gentry". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  84. "Andre Platzer". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  85. "Haryadi S Gunawi". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  86. "Keith Noah Snavely". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  87. "Bryan Parno". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  88. "Benjamin Snyder". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  89. "Seth Cooper". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  90. Wingfield, Nick (2012-07-07). "U. of Washington, a Northwest Pipeline to Silicon Valley". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2018-04-20.
  91. "Aleksander Madry". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  92. "David Steurer". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  93. "Shyamnath Gollakota". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  94. "Gregory Valiant". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  95. "Peter Hawkins". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  96. "Sanjam Garg". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  97. "Grey Ballard". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  98. "Shayan Oveis Gharan". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  99. "Matei Alexandru Zaharia". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  100. "How Apache Spark Is Transforming Big Data Processing, Development". eWEEK. Retrieved 2018-04-20.
  101. "John C. Duchi". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  102. "John Criswell". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  103. "Julian Shun". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  104. "Postdoc Julian Shun wins the ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award - Department of Statistics". statistics.berkeley.edu.
  105. "Aaron Sidford". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  106. "Shun Receives ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award - Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science". www.cs.cmu.edu.
  107. "Siavash Mirarab". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  108. "Siavash Mirarab Earns 2015 ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award Honorable Mention - Department of Computer Science". www.cs.utexas.edu.
  109. "Haitham Hassanieh". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  110. "MIT CSAIL graduate student Haitham Hassanieh PhD 15 receives ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award - MIT EECS". www.eecs.mit.edu. Archived from the original on 2020-01-26. Retrieved 2018-04-04.
  111. "Peter Bailis". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  112. "Veselin Raychev". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  113. "Aviad Rubinstein". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  114. "Mohsen Ghaffari". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  115. "Stefanie Mueller". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  116. "Chelsea Finn". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  117. "Ryan Beckett". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  118. "Tengyu Ma". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  119. "Mr Dor Minzer". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  120. "Jakub Tarnawski". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  121. "Jiajun Wu". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  122. "Chuchu Fan". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-08-26.
  123. "Henry Corrigan-Gibbs". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-08-26.
  124. "Ralf Jung". Awards Home. Association for Computing Machinery . Retrieved 2021-08-26.