ACM Prize in Computing
Appearance
ACM Prize in Computing | |
---|---|
Awarded for | early to mid-career innovative contributions in computing |
Country | United States |
Presented by | Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) |
Reward(s) | $250,000 |
First awarded | 2007 |
Website | awards |
The ACM Prize in Computing was established by the Association for Computing Machinery to recognize individuals for early to mid-career innovative contributions to computing. The award carries a prize of $250,000. Financial support is provided by an endowment from Infosys Inc.[1]
The ACM Prize in Computing was previously known as the ACM-Infosys Foundation Award in the Computing Sciences for award years 2007 through 2015. In 2016 it was announced that ACM Prize in Computing recipients are invited to participate in the Heidelberg Laureate Forum.
Recipients
[edit]Year | Recipients | Citation |
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2023 | Amanda Randles | For ground-breaking contributions to computational health through innovative algorithms, tools, and high performance computing methods for diagnosing and treating a variety of human diseases |
2022 | Yael Tauman Kalai | For breakthroughs in verifiable delegation of computation and fundamental contributions to cryptography. |
2021 | Pieter Abbeel | For contributions to robot learning, including learning from demonstrations and deep reinforcement learning for robotic control. |
2020 | Scott Aaronson | For groundbreaking contributions to quantum computing. |
2019 | David Silver | For breakthrough advances in computer game-playing. |
2018 | Shwetak Patel | For contributions to creative and practical sensing systems for sustainability and health. |
2017 | Dina Katabi | For her groundbreaking work in human-sensing technologies using wireless signals and in reducing interference across wireless networks. |
2016 | Alexei A. Efros | For groundbreaking data-driven approaches to computer graphics and computer vision. |
2015 | Stefan Savage | For innovative research in network security, privacy, and reliability that has taught us to view attacks and attackers as elements of an integrated technological, societal, and economic system. |
2014 | Dan Boneh | For ground-breaking contributions to the development of pairing-based cryptography and its application in identity-based encryption. |
2013 | David Blei | For contributions to the theory and practice of probabilistic topic modeling and Bayesian machine learning. |
2012 | Jeffrey Dean and Sanjay Ghemawat | For their leadership in the science and engineering of Internet-scale distributed systems. |
2011 | Sanjeev Arora | For contributions to computational complexity, algorithms, and optimization that have helped reshape our understanding of computation. |
2010 | Frans Kaashoek | For his landmark contributions to the structuring, robustness, scalability, and security of software systems, enabling efficient, mobile, and highly distributed applications and setting important research directions. |
2009 | Eric A. Brewer | For his design and development of highly scalable internet services and innovations in bringing information technology to developing regions. |
2008 | Jon Kleinberg | For his contributions to the science of networks and the World Wide Web. His work is a deep combination of social insights and mathematical reasoning. |
2007 | Daphne Koller | For her work on combining relational logic and probability that allows probabilistic reasoning to be applied to a wide range of applications, including robotics, economics, and biology. |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "About the ACM Prize in Computing". ACM Awards. ACM. Retrieved 22 April 2017.