Registered user since Thu 8 Mar 2018
Michael Carbin is the Jamieson Career Development Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
His primary research focus is the design of programming systems that manipulate system uncertainty to deliver improved performance, energy consumption, and resilience. Uncertainty — in the form of sampled and sensed values, dynamic computation structure, and intermittently available computing — is a first-order challenge in modern computing systems.
His research on verifying the reliability of programs that execute on unreliable hardware has received best paper awards at leading programming languages conferences (OOPSLA 2013 and OOPSLA 2014) as well as a Communications of the ACM Research Highlight in 2016. He has also published work at leading programming languages and systems conferences, including PLDI, OOPSLA, ASPLOS, LICS, SOSP, ICSE, and PPoPP.
Contributions
2021
SPLASH
- Committee Member in Review Committee within the OOPSLA-track
- Programming with Neural Surrogates of Programs
- Statically Bounded-Memory Delayed Sampling for Probabilistic Streams
- Programming and Reasoning with Partial Observability
- Programming with Neural Surrogates of Programs
- Reactive Probabilistic Programming
- Statically Bounded-Memory Delayed Sampling for Probabilistic Streams
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