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SCS Advisory Board Member Bios:
Randy Bryant
Benno Bernt
Frederick P. Brooks
Anuj
Dhanda
Edward Frank
Charles
Geschke
Anoop Gupta
Clinton
W. Kelly, III
Raymond
Lane
Philip
Lehman
Jacqueline
C. Morby
Jim Morris
Scott Russell
Alfred
Spector
Jay
Srini
David
Tennenhouse
Sunil
Wadhwani
Monte
Zweben
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Randal
E. Bryant
Dean and University Professor, School of Computer Science
Randal E. Bryant received the B.S. degree in applied mathematics
from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor in 1973, and the
S.M., E.E., and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering and
computer science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Cambridge in 1977, 1978, and 1981, respectively. He was on
the faculty at the California Institute of Technology from
1981 to 1984. Since September, 1984 he has been at Carnegie
Mellon University and is now the Robert Mehrabian Professor
of Computer Science. He also holds a courtesy position in
the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department. He was
Head of the Computer Science Department at Carnegie Mellon
from 1999 to 2004. Since April, 2004 he has been Dean of the
Carnegie Mellon University School of Computer Science. He
spent the 1990--1991 academic year as a Visiting Research
Fellow at Fujitsu Laboratories, Kawasaki, Japan.
His research and teaching interests include hardware design,
verification, and testing, as well as algorithms and computer
architecture. His computer systems textbook, coauthored with
David R. O'Hallaron, is currently in use at over 75 schools
worldwide. Dr. Bryant received the 1987 and 2003 CAD Transactions
Best Paper Awards, and the 1989 Baker Prize from the IEEE.
He was an Associate Editor for IEEE Transactions on Computer-Aided
Design for Integrated Circuits and Systems from 1989 to 1995
and Editor-in-Chief from 1995 to 1997. He was elected a Fellow
of the IEEE in 1990, for ``contributions to switch-level modeling
of very-large-scale integrated circuits.'' He was elected
a Fellow of the ACM in 1999. Dr. Bryant has received several
awards from the Semiconductor Research Corporation: Inventor
recognition awards in 1989 and 1990, as well as a technical
excellence award (shared with Edmund M. Clarke and Ken McMillan)
in 1996. He received the 1997 ACM Kanellakis Theory and Practice
Award (shared with Edmund M. Clarke, Ken McMillan, and Allen
Emerson) for contributing to the development of symbolic model
checking. He was elected to the National Academy of Engineering
in 2003.
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