 | The UCSD Computer Science and Engineering department has experienced
rapid growth in the number of faculty, the number of students and the
diversity of our research. Concretely, a majority of our fifty-two faculty
members were hired over the last seven years. During this same time we
have expanded into new areas including
bioinformatics,
computer vision,
graphics, and
embedded systems,
while we have become a leading institution
in areas ranging from
cryptography to networking.
Our department now includes over 300 graduate students, 200 of which are in the Ph.D. program,
and we have over 800 students majoring in our Computer Science, Computer
Engineering, or Bioinformatics undergraduate programs. Both of our graduate
programs in Computer Science and Computer Engineering are in the top twenty
in the nation and the Sloan survey of national graduate programs places us
in the top five in student satisfaction. Our junior faculty routinely receive
NSF CAREER awards (18 in total) and have received five Sloan fellowships in
the last five years alone, while 12 of our senior faculty have been named
fellows of the ACM, IEEE, AAAS, or National Academies. We even have a faculty
member who recently won an Academy Award--Professor Henrik Wann Jensen,
whose work on accurately rendering the appearance of skin is now routinely
used in Hollywood animated features and special effects.
Graduates of our undergraduate program are placing into positions at
leading companies such as Google, Microsoft, Sun and Cisco and into top Ph.D.
programs including MIT, Berkeley, Stanford and the University of Washington.
Similarly, many of our Ph.D. graduates have been hired into faculty positions
at top universities including Illinois (Urbana-Champaign), Wisconsin (Madison),
Texas (Austin), Maryland, Georgia Tech, Duke, Massachusetts (Amherst), Yale,
Columbia, Northwestern, as well as our own University of California system, or
into research departments of top companies such as IBM, Intel, Microsoft, and
Google.
Some other highlights include:
- In the last two years, we hired seven new faculty members, including Yoav
Freund (machine learning), Ranjit Jhala (model checking), Sorin Lerner
(compilers and programming languages), Beth Simon (educational and information
technology), Tajana Rosing (wireless media and embedded systems), Michael
Taylor (architecture) and Matthias Zwicker (graphics).
- Serge Belongie, Henrik Wann Jensen, and Stefan Savage were recently named
Sloan Research Fellows.
- Russell Impagliazzo was named a Guggenheim Fellow in April 2004.
- Multiple cover stories in Science and Nature have highlighted the
bioinformatics research of Eleazar Eskin and Pavel Pevzner.
- Over the past five years, CSE student teams have consistently won or placed
in the top three in ACM regional programming contests, thereby qualifying to compete
in four ACM ICPC World Finals.
- CSE faculty recently founded the multidisciplinary Center for Networked Systems
in partnership with AT&T, Hewlett-Packard, QUALCOMM, and Sun Microsystems. The partners
have committed $9 million over three years to help investigate the unique problems of
large-scale networks and distributed systems.
- The CSE-led Cooperative Center for Internet Epidemiology and Defenses was recently
named one of four national NSF CyberTrust centers, with an initial budget of over $7M
to investigate large-scale Internet security threats.
- Our new $41 million CSE building was completed, and we moved in this summer. At
nearly 87,000 assignable square feet, the building is designed to accommodate the
infrastructural needs of our department for decades to come.
- Finally, the CSE department plays a leading role in several research centers that
provide our graduate students and faculty with unique research opportunities. The
San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC), headed
by CSE professor Fran Berman, is an international leader in high-performance computing.
The California Institute of Telecommunications and
Information Technology (Cal-[IT]2), led by CSE professor Larry Smarr, is a
premier research center for the technologies that will shape the information and
communication systems of tomorrow.
The atmosphere within our department is bracing: there is a strong sense of community
and intellectual vigor. This is a wonderfully exciting time for us, and it is a great
department in which to reach one's full potential.
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Keith Marzullo
Professor and Chair
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