CRA Welcomes New FY 2016-17 Board Members


July 1 marks a new fiscal year for CRA. Today, we welcome six new members to our board of directors: Elizabeth Mynatt, Mario Nascimento, Penny Rheingans, Shashi Shekhar, Josep Torrellas, and Min Wang. Retiring from the board as of June 30, 2016 are Tracy Camp, Ann Condon, Laura Haas, Fred Schneider, and Cary Williamson. CRA would like to thank each of them for contributions during their service on the board.


Elizabeth D. Mynatt

Beth MynattElizabeth D. Mynatt, Professor of Interactive Computing and the Executive Director of Georgia Tech’s Institute for People and Technology, has now assumed the role of Chair of the Computing Community Consortium (CCC). Mynatt has served on the CCC since its formation and has spearheaded activities forging research collaborations in healthcare and health information technologies. Recently, Mynatt was one of the lead organizers for the CCC and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Aging in Place Workshop which led to a National Institutes of Health (NIH) new program for Collaborative Aging (in Place) Research Using Technology (CART) (U2C). Conclusions from that workshop were also integrated into the recent PCAST Report on Independence, Technology, and Connection in Older Age that Mynatt helped co-author.


Mario A. Nascimento

Mario NascimentoMario A. Nascimento is a full professor at the University of Alberta’s Department of Computing Science and since July 2014 serves as chair of the Department. Before joining the University of Alberta in 1999, he was a researcher with the Brazilian Agency for Agricultural Research and also an adjunct faculty member with the Institute of Computing of the University of Campinas.  Mario has also been a visiting professor at the National University of Singapore’s School of Computing (Fall 2005), Aalborg University’s Department of Computer Science (Winter 2006), LMU Munich (Fall 2013-Winter 2014) and at the Federal University of Ceara in Brazil (2013 and 2014).  In 2007 he was recognized as a Senior Member of the ACM.

His main research interests lie in the areas of Spatio-Temporal Data Management and Data Management for Wireless Sensor Networks, and according to Google Scholar (as of June 2016) his publications have been cited 2,900+ times, earning him an H-index of 27. Besides often serving as a program committee member for the main database conferences, and as (co-) chair of several workshops and symposia, Mario has also served as ACM SIGMOD’s Information Director (2002-2005) and ACM SIGMOD Record’s Editor-In-Chief (2005-2007).  He is currently a member of the VLDB Journal’s Editorial Board and of the SSTD Endowment’s Board of Directors. Finally, he finds it rather amusing writing about himself in the third person.


PennyPenny Rheingans

Penny Rheingans is a professor of computer science and electrical engineering and director of the Center for Women in Technology (CWIT). As CWIT director, she oversees a scholarship program for undergraduates committed to increasing gender diversity in the technology fields and develops programs to increase the interest and retention of women in technology programs.  She received a Ph.D. in computer science from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill and an A.B. in computer science from Harvard University. Her current research interests include the visualization of predictive models, visualization of data with associated uncertainty, volume rendering, information visualization, perceptual and illustration issues in visualization, non-photorealistic rendering, dynamic and interactive representations and interfaces, and the experimental validation of visualization techniques.


shekharShashi Shekhar

Shashi Shekhar, a McKnight Distinguished University Professor of computer science at the University of Minnesota, is a prominent researcher in the area of geographic information systems (GIS) and spatial computing. For contributions to these areas, he received the IEEE Computer Society Technical Achievement Award as well as the University Consortium for GIS Education Award (2015) and was elected an IEEE Fellow as well as an AAAS Fellow. He has a distinguished academic record that includes 300+ publications including a popular textbook on Spatial Databases (Prentice Hall, 2003), an authoritative Encyclopedia of GIS (Springer, 2008) and a massively open online course (Coursera, Fall 2014).

Shashi co-organized an NSF workshop (2015) to identify data science research challenges in the cross-directorate initiative on innovations at the nexus of food, energy, and water systems (INFEWS). Shashi has also served on multiple National Academies’ committees including Models of the World for USDOD-NGA (2015), Geo-targeted Disaster Alerts and Warning (2013), Future Workforce for Geospatial Intelligence (2011), Mapping Sciences (2004-2009) and Priorities for GEOINT Research (2004-2005).

Shashi represented the CRA in a recent Congressional reception titled “Deconstructing Precision Agriculture” for the house agricultural committee. He also served on the CRA’s Computing Community Consortium (CCC) Council (2012-15), where he coordinated the Blue Sky tracks initiative to help many conferences catalyze community to pursue bold new research directions. He also co-organized the CRA/CCC visioning workshop titled “From GPS and Virtual Globes to Spatial Computing 2020” and gist of the workshop report was published recently as a cover article for the Communications of the ACM (January 2016).


josep_torrellasJosep Torrellas

Josep Torrellas is a Professor at the Departments of Computer Science and (by courtesy) Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is the Director of the Center for Programmable Extreme Scale Computing, and past Director of the Illinois-Intel Parallelism Center (I2PC). He was also the Coordinator of the Illinois OpenSPARC Center of Excellence. He is a Fellow of IEEE (2004) and ACM (2010). He received the IEEE Computer Society 2015 Technical Achievement Award, for “Pioneering contributions to shared-memory multiprocessor architectures and thread-level speculation”.

Prof. Torrellas has served the computing research community extensively. From 2005 to 2010, he served as Chair of IEEE Technical Committee on Computer Architecture, where he contributed in a myriad of professional advancement activities; he continues to serve in its Advisory Board. He was a Council Member of CRA’s Computing Community Consortium (CCC) from 2011 to 2014. Prof. Torrellas has served in many initiatives from DARPA, NSF, DOE, NSA, NASA and CRA. For example, he co-organized two CCC workshops on Advancing Computer Architecture Research, and co-edited a CCC visioning white paper on 21st Century Computer Architecture. Torrellas has served in the organization of numerous professional conferences and workshops.

Torrellas received a Ph.D. from Stanford University. He has graduated over 35 Ph.D. students, who are now leaders in academia and industry.


Min-WangMin Wang

Min Wang joined Visa as the senior vice president and head of Visa Research in May 2015. Visa Research is a newly created organization as part of the company’s continued effort to expand technology research capabilities globally. Visa Research conducts applied research on the most challenging problems in the payment industry and provides technical thought leadership for the company’s future. In her role, Wang leads the research on data analytics, security, and the future of payments.

Prior to Visa, Wang was part of Google Research where she was a senior staff research scientist and research manager focused on knowledge integration and inferencing at Google’s headquarters in Mountain View, California. Before Google, Wang was director of HP Labs China in Beijing, China, where she was also named an HP Distinguished Technologist. Wang also held a senior research role as the manager of the Unified Data Analytics Department at IBM’s Thomas J. Watson Research Center in Hawthorne, New York.

Wang has received several distinguished research awards for her work on data management. In 2009, Wang received the ACM SIGMOD Test of Time Award for her 1999 SIGMOD paper, “Approximate Computation of Multidimensional Aggregates of Sparse Data Using Wavelets.”

Wang received her Ph.D. in computer science from Duke University and B.S. and M.S. degrees, both in computer science, from Tsinghua University, Beijing, China.