37°52′12″N 122°16′16″W / 37.870052°N 122.271235°W / 37.870052; -122.271235
The International Computer Science Institute (ICSI) is an independent, non-profit research organization located in Berkeley, California, United States. Since its founding in 1988, ICSI has maintained an affiliation agreement with the University of California, Berkeley, where several of its members hold faculty appointments.
Research areas
ICSI's research activities include Internet architecture, network security, network routing, speech and speaker recognition, spoken and text-based natural language processing, computer vision, multimedia, privacy and biological system modeling.
Research groups and leaders
- The Institute's director is Dr. Lea Shanley.1
- SIGCOMM Award2 winner Professor Scott Shenker, one of the most-cited authors in computer science, is the Chief Scientist and head of the New Initiatives group.
- SIGCOMM Award3 winner Professor Vern Paxson, who leads network security efforts and who previously chaired the Internet Research Task Force.
- Professor Jerry Feldman is the head of the Artificial Intelligence Group.
- Adjunct Professor Gerald Friedland is the head of the Audio and Multimedia Group.
- Dr. Stella Yu is head of the Computer Vision Group.
- Dr. Serge Egelman is head of the Usable Security and Privacy Group.
- Dr. Steven Wegman is head of the Speech Group.
Notable members and alumni
- Turing Award4 and Kyoto Prize5 winner Professor Richard Karp is an alumnus and former head of the Algorithms Group.
- Professor Nelson Morgan is a former director and former head of the speech group.
- Professor Trevor Darrell is an alumnus and former head of the Computer Vision Group.
- Professor Krste Asanovic, an ACM Distinguished Scientist,6 is an alumna and former head of the Computer Architecture Group.
- IEEE Internet Award7 winner Sally Floyd; connectionist pioneer Jerry Feldman; frame semantics and construction grammar pioneer Charles J. Fillmore and Collin F. Baker, who lead the FrameNet semantic parsing project; and Paul Kay, who published an influential study on the universality of color words.
- IEEE Internet Award winner Mark Handley founded the XORP open source router software project while at ICSI.
External links
References
"About ICSI". Retrieved 2012-02-21. http://www.icsi.berkeley.edu/about/index.html ↩
"SIGCOMM Award Winners". Retrieved 2012-02-21. http://www.sigcomm.org/awards/sigcomm-awards ↩
"SIGCOMM Award Winners". Retrieved 2012-02-21. http://www.sigcomm.org/awards/sigcomm-awards ↩
"Turing Award Winners". Archived from the original on 2009-12-12. Retrieved 2012-02-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20091212132624/http://awards.acm.org/homepage.cfm?srt=all&awd=140 ↩
"Kyoto Prize Laureates". Archived from the original on 2012-02-04. Retrieved 2012-02-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20120204064741/http://www.inamori-f.or.jp/e_kp_lau_yea.html ↩
"ACM Names 54 Distinguished Members for Contributions to Computing". Retrieved 2012-02-21. http://www.acm.org/press-room/news-releases/2011/distinguished-2011 ↩
"IEEE Internet Award Winners". Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). Archived from the original on April 7, 2010. Retrieved 2012-02-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20100407235918/http://www.ieee.org/about/awards/bios/internet_recipients.html ↩