George Necula

George Necula

George Necula in Berkeley in 2010.
Nationality Romanian
Fields Computer Science
Institutions University of California, Berkeley
Alma mater Carnegie Mellon University
Doctoral advisor Peter Lee
Known for Proof-carrying code

George Ciprian Necula is a Romanian computer scientist and professor at the University of California, Berkeley who does research in the area of programming languages and software engineering, with a particular focus on software verification and formal methods. He is best known for his Ph.D. thesis work first describing proof-carrying code,[1] a work that received the 2007 SIGPLAN Most Influential POPL Paper Award.[2]

Originally from Baia Mare, Romania,[3] Necula attended the Polytechnic University of Bucharest before coming to Carnegie Mellon University in the United States to complete his Ph.D. under programming languages researcher Peter Lee. His Ph.D. thesis first describing proof-carrying code was influential as a mechanism to allow untrusted machine code to run safely without performance overhead. He joined as faculty at the University of California, Berkeley in 1998.

More recently, Necula's work has focused on open-source analysis, verification, and transformation tools for C, including C Intermediate Language (CIL), CCured [1], and Deputy [2].

Awards

Necula is a Fellow of the Okawa Foundation and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation (see Sloan Fellowship). He received the Grace Murray Hopper Award in 2001,[4] the National Science Foundation CAREER Award in 1999,[5] and the ACM SIGOPS Hall of Fame Award in 2006.[6]

References

  1. ^ George C. Necula. Compiling with Proofs. PhD thesis, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon Univ., Sept. 1998.
  2. ^ SIGPLAN (2010-01-24). "Most Influential POPL Paper Award". ACM. http://www.sigplan.org/award-popl.htm. Retrieved 2010-02-02. 
  3. ^ George Necula (Spring 2010). "George Necula's Home Page". http://www.eecs.berkeley.edu/~necula/. Retrieved 2010-02-03. 
  4. ^ Association for Computing Machinery (2001). "ACM Award Citation / George Necula". http://awards.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=0142067&aw=145&ao=GMHOPPER&yr=2001. Retrieved 2010-02-02. 
  5. ^ National Science Foundation (2002-06-22). "Award Abstract #9875171 - CAREER: A Logic-Based Approach to Software System Integrity and Security". http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward.do?AwardNumber=9875171. Retrieved 2010-02-02. 
  6. ^ Association for Computing Machinery (2010). "SIGOPS - Hall of Fame Award". http://www.sigops.org/award-hof.html. Retrieved 2010-02-02. 

External links