Barton P. Miller
Biography
Barton Miller is the Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor and the Amar & Belinder Sohi Professor in Computer Sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is Chief Scientist for the DHS Software Assurance Marketplace research facility and leads the Paradyn Tools project, which is investigating performance and instrumentation technologies for parallel and distributed applications and systems. His research interests include systems security, binary and malicious code analysis and instrumentation extreme scale systems, and parallel and distributed program measurement and debugging. In 1988, Miller founded the field of Fuzz random software testing, which is the foundation of many security and software engineering disciplines. In 1992, Miller (working with his then ­student, Prof. Jeffrey Hollingsworth) founded the field of dynamic binary code instrumentation and coined the term “dynamic instrumentation”. Dynamic instrumentation forms the basis for his current efforts in malware analysis and program instrumentation. Miller is a Fellow of the ACM.
Presentations
Paper
Algorithms
Data Analytics
GPUs
Heterogeneous Systems
MPI
Parallel Application Frameworks
Parallel Programming Languages, Libraries, and Models
Performance
Productivity
Programming Systems
Runtime Systems
Scalable Computing
Task-based programming
Tools
TP
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