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PARALLEL PROFILE
Marina Chen
Professor and Department Chair, Computer Science Department, Boston
University; and President, Cooperating Systems Corporation
Marina Chen has been involved with the CRPC since 1989 as a member of
the External Advisory Committee, and recently, through research
collaborations with CRPC scientists at the Northeast Parallel
Architectures Center at Syracuse University. Her work with Geoffrey Fox,
Wojtek Furmanski, and other collaborators in the field of wide-area
distributed heterogeneous computing has led to the recent naming of
Boston University as the fifth CRPC affiliated site.
Chen has been Professor and Department Chair of the Computer Science
Department at Boston University and council member of the university's
Center for Computational Science since 1994. She has been President of
Cooperating Systems Corporation, a computer research company, since
1993. She began her career as an assistant professor at the Computer
Science Department at Yale University in 1983 and was associate
professor from 1987 to 1993. Chen has a B.S. in electrical engineering
from National Taiwan University (1978) and an M.S. and Ph.D. in computer
science from the California Institute of Technology (1980 and 1983).
Chen's current work in the field of metacomputing combines Web-based
technology and resource management techniques to provide reliability and
quality of service guarantees for collaborative, transportable
computing. "The most exciting aspect of this work is the opportunity to
make computer science research useful for the HPCC community," she says.
"Specifically, we are focusing on research teams whose applications
require the coordination of geographically dispersed expertise,
hardware, and software resources."
Chen recently helped launch the Metacenter Affiliated Resource in the
New England Region (MARINER) project, a collaboration of Boston
University's Computer Science Department and Center for Computational
Science that established the university as a regional resource for
advanced computational infrastructure technologies. "We expect the tools
developed for reliable, responsible metacomputing will be demonstrated
to industry, government, health care organizations, and educational
institutions in the New England region via the existing mechanisms set
up by the MARINER project," she says.
Last year, Chen collaborated with Fox, Furmanski, Jim Cowie of
Cooperating Systems Corporation, and Arjen Lenstra and Sandeep Bhatt of
Bellcore on the RSA-130 factoring project, which won the High-
Performance Computing Challenge Award for Most Geographically Dispersed
and Heterogeneous Factoring on the World-Wide Computer in the Teraflop
Challenge contest at Supercomputing '95. (See Research Focus section of Volume 4, Issue 2 - 1996 .)
Prior to her interest in metacomputing, Chen pioneered compilation
techniques for mapping high-level languages to distributed-memory
machines, focusing on methods of data distribution, alignment, and
automatic generation of communications. Her work in the area of "domain
morphism," formalizing the mapping from logical array to physically
distributed memory and its use as program annotations, is one of the
precursors to the data distribution directives of High Performance
Fortran.
Chen has been a consultant to companies and institutions, including
Scientific Computing Associates, Floating Point Systems, Silicon
Compilers Inc., and the Computer Science Department at the California
Institute of Technology. Her professional affiliations include serving
as secretary of the Association for Computing Machinery, voting member
of the High Performance Fortran Forum, editorial board member of IEEE
Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems, and associate editor
of the Journal of Programming Language. In addition to her
Supercomputing '95 award, Chen has won the 1987 and 1988 Gordon Bell
Awards for the Crystal Compiler, a pioneering, high-level language
compiler for parallel machines. She was an IBM Doctoral Fellow in 1982
and received best paper awards at IEEE ICCD '86 and Supercomputing '90.
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