Registered user since Wed 4 Jun 2014
Jonathan Aldrich is Associate Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University. He is the director of CMU’s Software Engineering Ph.D. program, and teaches courses in programming languages, software engineering, and program analysis for quality and security. In addition, he serves as a consultant on architecture, design, and legal issues in the software industry. Dr. Aldrich joined the CMU faculty after completing a Ph.D. at the University of Washington and a B.S. at Caltech.
Dr. Aldrich’s research centers on programming languages and type systems that are deeply informed by software engineering considerations. His research contributions include verifying the correct implementation of an architectural design, modular formal reasoning about code, and API protocol specification and verification. For his work on software architecture, Aldrich received a 2006 NSF CAREER award and the 2007 Dahl-Nygaard Junior Prize, given annually for a significant technical contribution to object-oriented programming. He is currently performing research on extensible programming languages, analysis and type systems for security and productivity, and foundations of object-oriented programming.
Contributions
2020
SPLASH
- Mentor in Mentors within the PLMW-track
- A Case Study in Language-Based Security: Building an I/O Library for Wyvern
- Can Advanced Type Systems Be Usable? An Empirical Study of Ownership, Assets, and Typestate in Obsidian
- Committee Member in External Review Committee within the OOPSLA-track
- Session Chair of F-5A (part of OOPSLA)
- Gradual Verification of Recursive Heap Data Structures
- Steering Committee Chair in Onward! Steering Committee within the Onward! Essays-track
- Committee Member in Steering Committee
- Session Chair of M-5 (part of OOPSLA)
- A Case Study in Language-Based Security: Building an I/O Library for Wyvern
- Steering Committee Chair in Onward! Steering Committee within the Onward! Papers-track
- Can Advanced Type Systems Be Usable? An Empirical Study of Ownership, Assets, and Typestate in Obsidian
- Can Advanced Type Systems Be Usable? An Empirical Study of Ownership, Assets, and Typestate in Obsidian
- Gradual Verification of Recursive Heap Data Structures
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