The Grace Hopper Conference includes a Ph.D. Forum that showcases the research of current Ph.D. students, with the additional goal of providing support and mentoring. This year we had three sessions with a total of 10 presentations. I was co-chair of the Ph.D. Forum, so perhaps I'm not an unbiased reporter, but I was incredibly impressed with the quality of the six presentations I saw. The sessions were very well attended, and audience members asked great questions. In addition, the audience filled out evaluation forms for each presenter, providing feedback on her presentation. So here's a list of up-and-coming CS researchers--keep an eye out for these women!
Samira M. Khan (University of Texas at San Antonio), Intelligent Cache Management for Reducing Memory System Waste
Maritza L. Johnson (Columbia University), Usable Security and Privacy Policy Management
Ting-Fang Yen (Carnegie Mellon University), Detecting Stealthy Malware Using Behavioral Features in Network Traffic
Lile Hattori (University of Lugano), Change-Centric Suport for Team Collaboration
Gabrielle A. Anderson (University of Southampton), Behavioural Properties and Dynamic Software Update for Concurrent Programs
Cindy Rubio-González (University of Wisconsin-Madison), Finding Error-Handling Bugs in Systems Code Using Static Analysis
Yasaman Haghpanah (University of Maryland, Baltimore County), A Trust and Reputation Model for Supply Chain Management
Karen Tanenbaum (Simon Fraser University), User Perceptions of Adaptivity in Ubiquitous Systems: A Critical Exploration
Alana Platt (Illinois Institute of Technology), Using Social Network Messages to Monitor Evolving Topics
Anna M. Ritz (Brown University), Algorithms for Identifying Structural Variants in Human Genomes
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