|
Joseph Pasquale
is a
professor of computer science
and holder of the
J. Robert Beyster
Chair in Engineering
at the
University of California, San Diego,
where
he has
been on the faculty since 1987.
He teaches
operating systems at the graduate and undergraduate levels,
and
his
research
interests are
in operating systems, distributed systems and networks,
focusing on performance and reliability
of Internet-scale systems
with highly decentralized control
(e.g., cloud computing and peer-to-peer systems).
He
received
his
Ph.D. in computer science from the
University of California, Berkeley
(with dissertation on
fundamental problems of decentralized control in
large-scale distributed systems,
advised by
Domenico Ferrari),
and
bachelor's and master's degrees
from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(with dissertation on
the design and implementation of
computer-synthesized musical performance systems,
advised by
Marvin Minsky
and mentored by
Hal Alles
and
Max Mathews
at Bell Laboratories).
He is
a recipient of
the UCSD Chancellor's Associates Faculty Excellence Award
in Undergraduate Teaching (2007),
the UCSD Academic Senate
Distinguished Teaching Award (2003),
the IBM Faculty Award (1991),
the TRW Young Investigator Award (1991),
the NCR faculty award (1991),
and the NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award (1989).
He
was a member of the
IDA/DARPA
Defense Science Study Group V (1996-97).
He
served
on numerous ACM and IEEE technical program conference committees,
including those for
SIGCOMM, SIGMETRICS,
ICDCS, INFOCOM,
Multimedia, NOSSDAV,
CSCW, and ISADS.
He
also served on and chaired
the ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award committee (1993-97)
and numerous NSF award and review committees.
More recently,
he has
been actively involved in a
math and engineering-oriented study-abroad program in Rome for undergraduates,
and an outreach program to interest high school students in computer science.
|