Program Highlights

Doctoral Consortium (by invitation only)
Sunday, October 14
8:00 am to 5:30 pm, in the Gardenia and Fuschia Rooms
Supported by the National Science Foundation

The Doctoral Consortium provides an opportunity for Ph.D. students to discuss and explore their research interests and career objectives with a panel of established researchers in computing and in computational mathematics, science and engineering.

Student and Scholarship Recipient Orientations
Sunday, October 14

At the Student and Scholarship Recipient Orientations, experience and suggestions will be offered to students toward maximizing the benefits of their participation in the Tapia 2007 conference and future professional activities.

Scholarship Orientation
6:00 to 6:30 pm, in Palm Ballroom 3
Poster competition students as well as scholarship recipients are strongly encouraged to attend this session. Scholarship reimbursement procedures and conference participation expectations will be discussed. In addition, questions about submitting reimbursement requests and common mistakes made in the past will be addressed. Prevent reimbursement delays by attending this session.

Student Orientation
6:30 to 8:00 pm, in Palm Ballroom 3
All students are invited to attend this pre-conference information session, which is aimed at helping students make the most of their conference experience. Students will be introduced to luminaries, leaders, and representatives from professional societies, academia, national laboratories, and industry. Students will also learn valuable networking skills that can be immediately put to use.

 

Opening Reception
Sunday, October 14
8:00 to 10:00 pm, in Palm Ballrooms 1 and 2
Hosted by Google

The Opening Reception offers a relaxed setting for the start of the conference. This is an opportune time to meet and network with colleagues, leaders in the field, and potential future collaborators. Conference participants will have an opportunity to meet honoree Richard Tapia, a host of speakers and panelists, representatives from our sponsors and supporters, conference organizers, and other conference participants.

 

Plenary Speakers
True to the conference theme, “Passion in Computing, Diversity in Innovation,” Tapia 2007 plenary sessions feature presentations on wide ranging topics by diverse leaders in the computing sciences from academia, industry, and government agencies.

It’s Not Just About the Machine!
Shirley Malcom, Head of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Directorate for Education and Human Resources Programs
9:00-10:00 a.m. Monday, in International Ballrooms North and Center

Diversity: A Weapon of Mass Construction
Norman Johnson, Chief Scientist at Referentia Systems
1:30 -2:30 p.m. Monday, in International Ballrooms North and Center

kuhl-er-blahynd
John Leslie King, University of Michigan's Vice Provost for Academic Information and a Professor in the School of Information.
9:00-10:00 a.m. Tuesday, in International Ballrooms North and Center

Luncheon Speakers
Appreciating Mathematical Computation through Applications to Very Cool Activities
Richard A. Tapia, University Professor and Maxfield-Oshman Professor in Engineering, Rice University
Edward Gonzalez, Ph.D. Candidate, Computational and Applied Mathematics, Rice University
Joseph Sifuentes. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellow, Computational and Applied Mathematics , Rice University
12:15-1:30 p.m. Tuesday, in Palm Ballroom 2

Ken Kennedy Distinguished Lecture
Multi-Robot Intelligence
Manuela Veloso, Herbert A. Simon Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University
1:30-2:30 p.m. Tuesday, in International Ballrooms North and Center

Banquet Speaker
Mentoring across Race and Discipline
Maria Klawe, President of Harvey Mudd College in California
7:00-9:00 p.m. Tuesday, in Palm Ballroom 2

Plenary Speaker
Diversity is the Key to IT Security at Disney
Anne Kuhns, Director of IT Security, Walt Disney Parks and Resorts
9:00-10:00 a.m. Wednesday, in International Ballrooms North and Center

 

Student Poster Presentations and Reception

Poster Display and Reception
Monday, October 15
6:00-9:00 p.m., in the Grand Foyer

Poster Semi-Finalist Oral Presentations
Tuesday, October 16
10:30 a.m.-12:15 p.m., in International Ballroom North

The Tapia 2007 poster session is an opportunity for students to present their latest research results and methodologies to a wide conference audience and to network at the same time. This year, the posters competition is part of the ACM Student Research Competition (SRC). The top three posters in the graduate and undergraduate student categories will advance to the ACM SRC Grand Finals.

The poster competition will take place in three stages. The first stage was submission of posters to the conference. Acceptance decisions were based on the relevance and importance of the problem, the correctness and contribution of the results reported, and the clarity of the presentation.

The second stage is the Monday night poster session. Each author of an accepted poster will be assigned a space to display a printed research poster. These posters will remain up for the duration of the conference. On Monday evening, October 15, authors will present their posters in a reception attended by conference attendees and judges. The judges will have the opportunity to view the posters and talk to entrants about their work. The judges will then select the top five posters in the graduate and undergraduate categories as semi-finalists to advance to the third stage.

The third stage will require that each semi-finalist give a 10-minute oral presentation of their work at a special conference session on Tuesday, October 16. Based on these presentations, the judges will select up to three graduates and three undergraduates as winners of the competition. First, second, and third place winners in each category will receive checks for $1000, $500, and $250 respectively. They will also be entered into the ACM Grand Finals for the Student Research Competition to be held online.

 

Robotics Competition
For the first time, the Tapia conference is hosting a robotics competition to test students’ skills in building and programming robots to operate both in virtual and real-world environments. Five teams of university students took up the challenge and iRobot donated iRobot Create™ robots for each of the teams. The competition includes a series of activities that are part of the conference program.

Monday, October 15
10:30-11:30 a.m.
(BOF) Robotics Competition Preparation, in International Ballroom Center

6:00-9:00 p.m.
Robotics Competition teams will present posters coinciding with the ACM Student Poster Competition and Reception, in the Grand Foyer

Tuesday, October 16
3:00-6:00 p.m.
Robotics Competition,  in the Poinsettia and Quince Rooms, Sponsored by iRobot

 


Banquet and Awards Ceremony
7:00-9:00 p.m., in Palm Ballroom 2
Sponsored by Microsoft

At the celebratory banquet, good food and lively conversation will be followed by an invited talk by Maria Klawe and an awards ceremony. In addition to networking with a diverse group of students, faculty, researchers and practitioners from many areas, you will be able to socialize with a number of leaders in the field of computing in an informal setting. The evening will end with a DJ spinning music for dancing.

Awards to be presented:
Best Student Poster
Awards will given for the top three student posters.
Robotics Competition Award

The Richard A. Tapia Achievement Awards for Scientific Scholarship, Civic Science, and Diversifying Computing
A highlight of the evening will be the presentation of the “Richard A. Tapia Achievement Awards for Scientific Scholarship, Civic Science and Diversifying Computing.” The award honors Richard Tapia’s lifetime work as a “civic scientist” – a scientist who recognizes that at the very center of our highly complex technological and scientific world are people. Recipients are distinguished computational or computer scientists or computer engineers who are also making significant contributions to quality of life matters such as teaching, mentoring, advising, building and serving communities, or affecting local or national policy on human resource issues. Awardees will be recognized as those who demonstrate extraordinary leadership in increasing the participation of those groups who are underrepresented in the sciences.

Ken Kennedy Distinguished Lecture Award
This year marks the establishment of the Ken Kennedy Distinguished Lecture, to be given at each Tapia Conference. The technical presentation, to be given by a world-class researcher in an area of computing, recognizes the vast contributions of Ken Kennedy, a computing pioneer and one of the world’s foremost experts on high-performance computing. Dr. Kennedy, founder of Rice University’s Department of Computer Science as well as several centers focused on computing, passed away in early 2007.

Banquet Invited Presentation:
Mentoring across Race and Discipline
Maria Klawe, president of Harvey Mudd College in California and former dean of engineering and professor of computer science at Princeton University, will talk about how, as a female working at the boundary between mathematics and computer science, one of her life goals has been to increase the participation of women in science and engineering careers, especially in computer science and mathematics.

Conversation, Music, and Dancing
Finish the evening with great conversation, music and dancing.

Closing Lunch and Town Hall Meeting
Wednesday, October 17
12:15-1:30 p.m., in Palm Ballroom 2

Your help is needed with the planning of future events and programs related to increasing diversity in the field of computing. Voice your ideas or suggestions during the Town Hall Meeting, which will provide an open forum for discussions about future Tapia events as well as possible programs that can be undertaken by the Coalition to Diversify Computing, a joint organization of the ACM, CRA and IEEE-CS, which is open to ideas for new projects that aid in increasing the diversity in the field of computing, especially within graduate programs in computing.

The Tapia Conference will be co-located with and bridge the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing 2007, which will be held October 17-20, 2007, in Orlando, Florida.

 

Speakers


Shirley Malcom is head of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Directorate for Education and Human Resources Programs, which includes programs in education, activities for underrepresented groups, and public understanding of science and technology. A fellow of the AAAS and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Malcom has chaired a number of national committees addressing education reform and access to scientific and technical education, careers and literacy. In 2003, she received the Public Welfare Medal of the National Academy of Sciences, the highest award given by the Academy.

At Tapia 2007, Malcom’s talk will contend “It’s Not Just About the Machine!” She states that “Information is power. So the ability to create and manage information is empowering. When diversity is not reflected in a community that fuels a knowledge and information driven world, the skills to solve problems are not available to large segments of the population. It is now possible to draw congressional maps in ways that enfranchise or disenfranchise large populations of people. We have moved from paper to electronic voting. We can remotely monitor and document acts of genocide. We can create wealth and support meaningful work. We can invade or protect privacy. Given all the potential power in the hands of computing professionals, we must work to ensure that this capacity is reflected in a more diverse profession and that the power and responsibilities are incorporated into the way computer science is practiced.”


John Leslie King is the University of Michigan's vice provost for academic information and a professor in the School of Information. In June 2007, he was appointed to a three-year term on the Council for the Computing Community Consortium, established by the Computing Research Association (CRA) under a $6 million, three-year agreement with the National Science Foundation to identify major research opportunities and establish "grand challenges" for the computing field. He is also a member of the NSF advisory committees for computing and information science and engineering, as well as the social, behavioral, and economic sciences.

In describing his talk entitled „kuhl-er-blahynd,” King notes that “Fewer than 50 percent of English words are spelled phonetically. Yet, some people are adamant that phonics is the only way to learn to read English. Ideology often trumps fact, and this shows up clearly with regard to racial and ethnic diversity. In the past two decades, U.S. discourse on race relations has made a curious shift, from acute color-awareness to a recent claim that everything will be solved if American society simply becomes ‘colorblind.’ Even if that was possible, would it be desirable? This talk uses the ideology of colorblindness to explore various ways people can be blind to facts.”


Maria Klawe is president of Harvey Mudd College in California and former dean of engineering and professor of computer science at Princeton University. She has made significant research contributions in several areas of mathematics and computer science, including theoretical computer science, human-computer interaction, gender issues in information technology, and interactive-multimedia for mathematics education. Her current research focuses on the development and use of multi-modal applications to assist people with aphasia and other cognitive impairments.

In her Tapia 2007 invited talk on “Mentoring across Race and Discipline,” Klawe will discuss how “As a female working at the boundary between mathematics and computer science, one of my life goals has been to increase the participation of women in science and engineering careers, especially in computer science and mathematics. Moving to the U.S. from Canada four and half years ago has given me the opportunity to become much more involved in mentoring minority students, some of whom have been working in areas I know little about. This talk explores some of the challenges and successes I have found in trying to translate approaches from mentoring women in my own field to mentoring students of color in many fields.”


Norman L. Johnson is the chief scientist at Referentia Systems, a small, minority-owned business that develops technologies to addresse complex problems in defense and homeland security. He is currently on leave from Los Alamos National Laboratory where he headed a number of projects ranging from biothreats to genomics, from sensor systems to system modeling to operations. His areas of interest are biodefense, epidemiology — particularly pandemic influenza, science of diversity, and modeling the dynamics of social collectives and social identity.

At Tapia 2007, he will give a talk entitled “Diversity: A Weapon of Mass Construction.” In his presentation, Johnson will consider “How is it possible in 2007 that science and society have not come to a common understanding of the role of diversity in areas that deeply influence our lives—from ecologies to politics to the stock market? Socially we encourage diversity from at least an ethical viewpoint, if not from business argument. But then, our organizational actions emphasize the competitive origin of performance — ‘hire the best,’ ‘reward the achievers,’ ‘follow the strong’ — all of which are fundamentally destructive to diversity. To resolve these conflicting views, we will take a journey of discovery that illustrates how the different roles of diversity in achieving higher performance are just different stages of development in complex systems or different roles of leadership in a complex society. Optimism for the future is found in the synergy of diversity — the ultimate weapon of mass construction.”


Richard Tapia Richard Tapia is a mathematician in the Department of Computational and Applied Mathematics at Rice University, where he holds the rank of University Professor and is also Maxfield-Oshman Professor in Engineering and Director of the Center for Excellence and Equity in Education. Dr. Tapia received the B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees in mathematics from the University of California-Los Angeles.

Both of Dr. Tapia’s parents came to the United States from Mexico when they were children, seeking educational opportunities. Dr. Tapia was the first Hispanic elected to the National Academy of Engineering. He was appointed to the National Science Board in 1996 by President Clinton. He has also received the lifetime mentorship award of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the National Science Foundation’s Presidential Mentoring Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering. Two national conferences carry his name: The Blackwell-Tapia Conference and the Tapia Celebration of Diversity in Computing.

Throughout his life Richard Tapia has been involved in competitive bicycle and car activities. In this presentation, composed of video segments with narration, he and his co-presenters share several experiences in which his mathematical training assisted him in appreciating, identifying, understanding, or solving a problem he encountered racing bikes or displaying a show car. Rice Ph.D. student Edward Gonzalez demonstrates how he used discrete optimization computation to solve the problem of assigning lanes fairly in bicycle motorcross (BMX) racing. Josef Sifuentes, also a Rice Ph.D. student, describes how he used computation to make a psychedelic video to accompany the showing of the award-winning Tapia ’70 Chevelle Heavy Metal at car shows across the country. The images were created using the nation’s largest supercomputer to perform numerical simulations of the Navier-Stokes partial differential equations that govern fluid flow in and around the car in the video. This presentation has been given to thousands of people across the country that initially believed that computational mathematics had nothing to do with their world.


Manuela Veloso Manuela M. Veloso is Herbert A. Simon Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University. She earned her Ph.D. in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon. She also received a B.S. in Electrical Engineering in 1980 and an M.Sc. in Electrical and Computer Engineering in 1984 from the Instituto Superior Tecnico in Lisbon.

Veloso researches in planning, control learning, and execution for multirobot teams. Her algorithms address uncertain, dynamic, and adversarial environments. With her students, Veloso has developed teams of robot soccer agents, which have been RoboCup world champions several times.

Veloso is a Fellow of the American Association of Artificial Intelligence and President-Elect of the RoboCup International Federation. She was awarded an NSF Career Award in 1995 and the Allen Newell Medal for Excellence in Research in 1997. Veloso was Program Chair of the 2007 International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, IJCAI'07, held in Hyderabad.

Veloso is the author of one book on "Planning by Analogical Reasoning" and editor of several other books. She is also an author in more than 200 journal articles and conference papers.

Her presentation, "Multi-Robot Intelligence" shows how robots are physical artifacts with a seamless integration of perception, cognition, and action. The presentation will be focused on teams of intelligent autonomous robots performing tasks in highly uncertain domains. Robots need to jointly assess the state of their environment, communicate with each other, make decisions, execute actions towards the achievement of team objectives, and learn from observation and feedback based on the outcome of their actions.


Anne Kuhns is the Director of IT Security for Walt Disney Parks and Resorts. Her responsibilities include information security, privacy, business continuity strategy, and IT risk management for Disney Parks and Resorts IT world-wide. In her 31year career with Disney IT she has held a variety of roles including application development, technical support, project management, strategy development and information security and risk management. Her team has delivered a variety of information security infrastructure solutions, incorporated information security into the WDP&R IT project management methodology, and developed an information security awareness program that has been adopted across other business units within The Walt Disney Company. Kuhns was recognized as the Information Security Executive of the Year – Southeast 2007 by the Executive Alliance. She is a member of the Computer Security Institute and is serving a second consecutive term as chairperson for the CSI Advisory Council, and she is a member of ISACA. A Florida native, Kuhns earned her bachelor's and master's degrees from the University of Florida. In her spare time, she likes to travel, read, or do anything close to or on the ocean.

Her presentation, "Diversity is the Key to IT Security at Disney", highlights the fact that (whether in films, in its theme parks on three continents or its ability to completely captivate its audiences) the companies established by Walt Disney are renowned for their painstaking attention to even the smallest details. And our philosophy is no different when it comes to IT security at our theme parks and resorts. Protecting the personal information of our millions of visitors and tens of thousands of employees is critical to keeping the trust the organization has built up over 75 years. Achieving this goal requires an extremely talented and diverse team with both expertise and creativity. Together we have developed a collaborative, comprehensive and passionate approach that works so well, most people never even know about it. In this talk, I’ll provide a behind-the-scenes look at one of Disney’s most successful, but least known thrill rides – IT security.

edited by mks, 10-05-2007, 11:26 AM, CST